Enhanced discrimination of high-dimensional quantum states by concatenated optimal measurement strategies
M. A. Sol\'is-Prosser, O. Jim\'enez, A. Delgado, L. Neves

TL;DR
This paper introduces a concatenated measurement strategy that enhances the discrimination of high-dimensional quantum states, significantly increasing success probabilities by utilizing both conclusive and inconclusive results in quantum state identification.
Contribution
It presents a novel concatenated measurement approach that combines unambiguous and minimum-error strategies, improving quantum state discrimination in high-dimensional spaces.
Findings
Achieved up to 2.07-fold increase in correct retrodictions for 4-dimensional states.
Achieved up to 3.73-fold increase in correct retrodictions for 9-dimensional states.
Experimentally demonstrated the effectiveness of the concatenated measurement strategy.
Abstract
The impossibility of deterministic and error-free discrimination among nonorthogonal quantum states lies at the core of quantum theory and constitutes a primitive for secure quantum communication. Demanding determinism leads to errors, while demanding certainty leads to some inconclusiveness. One of the most fundamental strategies developed for this task is the optimal unambiguous measurement. It encompasses conclusive results, which allow for error-free state retrodictions with the maximum success probability, and inconclusive results, which are discarded for not allowing perfect identifications. Interestingly, in high-dimensional Hilbert spaces the inconclusive results may contain valuable information about the input states. Here, we theoretically describe and experimentally demonstrate the discrimination of nonorthogonal states from both conclusive and inconclusive results in the…
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