Beyond the density operator and Tr(\rho A): Exploiting the higher-order statistics of random-coefficient pure states for quantum information processing
Yannick Deville, Alain Deville

TL;DR
This paper introduces Random-Coefficient Pure States (RCPS), a new quantum state class that leverages higher-order statistical information of state coefficients for advanced quantum information processing tasks like parameter estimation.
Contribution
The paper presents RCPS as a novel state class that captures richer information through higher-order statistics, enabling improved quantum process estimation beyond traditional density operator methods.
Findings
RCPS contain more information than density operators.
Higher-order statistics improve parameter estimation accuracy.
Numerical tests confirm the effectiveness of higher-order statistical methods.
Abstract
Two types of states are widely used in quantum mechanics, namely (deterministic-coefficient) pure states and statistical mixtures. A density operator can be associated with each of them. We here address a third type of states, that we previously introduced in a more restricted framework. These states generalize pure ones by replacing each of their deterministic ket coefficients by a random variable. We therefore call them Random-Coefficient Pure States, or RCPS. We analyze their properties and their relationships with both types of usual states. We show that RCPS contain much richer information than the density operator and mean of observables that we associate with them. This occurs because the latter operator only exploits the second-order statistics of the random state coefficients, whereas their higher-order statistics contain additional information. That information can be accessed…
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.
