Achieving minimum-error discrimination of an arbitrary set of laser-light pulses
Marcus P. da Silva, Saikat Guha, Zachary Dutton (Raytheon BBN, Technologies)

TL;DR
This paper presents a quantum computer-based method for optimally discriminating any set of laser-light coherent states, surpassing traditional optical receiver limits and achieving the fundamental quantum error probability bound.
Contribution
It introduces a resource-efficient quantum circuit approach for optimal coherent state discrimination, extending Dolinar's two-state receiver to arbitrary sets of states.
Findings
Achieves minimum error discrimination for any set of coherent states.
Demonstrates reusability and composability of the quantum circuit.
Surpasses classical optical receiver performance in information transmission rate.
Abstract
Laser light is widely used for communication and sensing applications, so the optimal discrimination of coherent states--the quantum states of light emitted by a laser--has immense practical importance. However, quantum mechanics imposes a fundamental limit on how well different coher- ent states can be distinguished, even with perfect detectors, and limits such discrimination to have a finite minimum probability of error. While conventional optical receivers lead to error rates well above this fundamental limit, Dolinar found an explicit receiver design involving optical feedback and photon counting that can achieve the minimum probability of error for discriminating any two given coherent states. The generalization of this construction to larger sets of coherent states has proven to be challenging, evidencing that there may be a limitation inherent to a linear-optics-based adaptive…
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