One-Shot Detection Limits of Quantum Illumination with Discrete Signals
Man-Hong Yung, Fei Meng, Ming-Jing Zhao

TL;DR
This paper derives the optimal quantum states for detecting stealth targets using quantum illumination with discrete signals, revealing fundamental limits and conditions for quantum advantage in detection sensitivity.
Contribution
It provides a complete set of analytic solutions for the detection limits in quantum illumination with discrete signals, classifying parameter space into distinct regions and identifying when quantum advantage is achievable.
Findings
Quantum advantage exists only above certain reflectivity thresholds.
Optimal entangled states have an entanglement spectrum inversely related to environmental spectrum.
Below critical reflectivity, signals are ineffective regardless of entanglement.
Abstract
A minimally-invasive way to detect the presence of a stealth target is to probe it with a single photon and analyze the reflected signals. The efficiency of such a conventional detection scheme can potentially be enhanced by the method of quantum illumination, where entanglement is exploited to break the classical limits. The question is, what is the optimal quantum state that allows us to achieve the detection limit with a minimal error? Here we address this question for discrete signals, by deriving a complete and general set of analytic solutions for the whole parameter space, which can be classified into three distinct regions, in the form of phase diagrams for both conventional and quantum illumination. Interestingly, whenever the reflectivity of the target is less than some critical values, all received signals become useless, which is true even if entangled resources are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Laser-Matter Interactions and Applications
