Convergence rates for the quantum central limit theorem
Simon Becker, Nilanjana Datta, Ludovico Lami, Cambyse Rouz\'e

TL;DR
This paper refines the understanding of the quantum central limit theorem by analyzing convergence rates using phase space formalism, with implications for quantum optics and optical fiber channels.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of convergence rates in the quantum CLT, including bounds in Hilbert--Schmidt and trace norms, and extends techniques to non-i.i.d. optical fiber models.
Findings
Convergence rate in Hilbert--Schmidt norm is O(n^{-1/2}) for states with finite third moments.
The effective channel in a cascade of beam splitters converges to a thermal attenuator at a rate of O(n^{-1/(2(m+1))}).
Quantum characteristic functions are uniformly bounded outside neighborhoods of the origin, depending only on energy.
Abstract
Various quantum analogues of the central limit theorem, which is one of the cornerstones of probability theory, are known in the literature. One such analogue, due to Cushen and Hudson, is of particular relevance for quantum optics. It implies that the state in any single output arm of an -splitter, which is fed with copies of a centred state with finite second moments, converges to the Gaussian state with the same first and second moments as . Here we exploit the phase space formalism to carry out a refined analysis of the rate of convergence in this quantum central limit theorem. For instance, we prove that the convergence takes place at a rate in the Hilbert--Schmidt norm whenever the third moments of are finite. Trace norm or relative entropy bounds can be obtained by leveraging the energy boundedness of the state. Via…
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