Polar coding to achieve the Holevo capacity of a pure-loss optical channel
Saikat Guha, Mark M. Wilde

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that quantum polar codes, combined with a quantum successive-cancellation receiver, can nearly achieve the Holevo capacity of a pure-loss optical channel, surpassing classical and traditional polar coding methods.
Contribution
It introduces a quantum polar coding scheme tailored for optical channels that approaches the Holevo capacity, unlike classical polar codes which fall short.
Findings
Quantum polar codes nearly close the capacity gap in low-photon regimes.
Classical polar codes fail to reach the Holevo limit with optical receivers.
Quantum successive-cancellation decoding can attain the Holevo capacity.
Abstract
In the low-energy high-energy-efficiency regime of classical optical communications---relevant to deep-space optical channels---there is a big gap between reliable communication rates achievable via conventional optical receivers and the ultimate (Holevo) capacity. Achieving the Holevo capacity requires not only optimal codes but also receivers that make collective measurements on long (modulated) codeword waveforms, and it is impossible to implement these collective measurements via symbol-by-symbol detection along with classical postprocessing. Here, we apply our recent results on the classical-quantum polar code---the first near-explicit, linear, symmetric-Holevo-rate achieving code---to the lossy optical channel, and we show that it almost closes the entire gap to the Holevo capacity in the low photon number regime. In contrast, Arikan's original polar codes, applied to the DMC…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
