TL;DR
This paper investigates the dimensions of the manifold of quantum states accessible under linear and Gaussian quantum optics, revealing fundamental limits and properties of state space exploration in quantum optics.
Contribution
It introduces a simple method to compute orbit dimensions, linking them to state space structure, non-Gaussianity, and circuit expressivity in quantum optics.
Findings
Orbit dimensions reveal fundamental state space structure.
Boson bunching does not increase accessible directions.
Orbit dimensions can indicate non-Gaussianity of states.
Abstract
We study the dimension of the manifold of quantum states (called orbit) that a given quantum state of light can reach under the dynamics of linear or Gaussian quantum optics. That is, we investigate how many directions in the Hilbert space a given state can explore under these sub-universal regimes. We find that these orbit dimensions reveal fundamental insights into the structure of attainable state spaces (e.g. boson bunching does not increase the number of accessible directions) with multi-faceted consequences. By showcasing a simple way to compute this topological quantity, we reveal how it can alone yield no-go results for some transformations. Our framework is proven to hold in both discrete and continuous-variable settings, and can be used with Fock as well as phase-space representations such as the Wigner or stellar representations. We study genericity and robustness properties…
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