Discriminating quantum-optical beam-splitter channels with number-diagonal signal states: Applications to quantum reading and target detection
Ranjith Nair

TL;DR
This paper investigates optimal quantum strategies for distinguishing optical beam-splitter channels, deriving bounds and identifying states that minimize error probabilities, with applications to quantum reading and target detection.
Contribution
It introduces number-diagonal signal states and provides formulas for error bounds, showing when nonclassical states outperform classical ones in quantum channel discrimination.
Findings
NDS states minimize fidelity for given photon distribution
Fock states minimize fidelity at fixed total energy
Quantum advantage is limited under high-loss conditions
Abstract
We consider the problem of distinguishing, with minimum probability of error, two optical beam-splitter channels with unequal complex-valued reflectivities using general quantum probe states entangled over M signal and M' idler mode pairs of which the signal modes are bounced off the beam splitter while the idler modes are retained losslessly. We obtain a lower bound on the output state fidelity valid for any pure input state. We define number-diagonal signal (NDS) states to be input states whose density operator in the signal modes is diagonal in the multimode number basis. For such input states, we derive series formulas for the optimal error probability, the output state fidelity, and the Chernoff-type upper bounds on the error probability. For the special cases of quantum reading of a classical digital memory and target detection (for which the reflectivities are real valued), we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Spectroscopy Techniques in Biomedical and Chemical Research
