Amplitude-amplified coherence detection and estimation
Rhea Alexander, Michalis Skotiniotis, Daniel Manzano

TL;DR
This paper introduces amplitude-amplified protocols for detecting and estimating quantum coherence in unknown pure states, achieving quadratic improvements in sample complexity over traditional methods and providing operational interpretations for coherence measures.
Contribution
The work develops novel coherence detection and estimation protocols using amplitude amplification and phase estimation, reducing sample complexity and offering new operational insights.
Findings
Quadratic reduction in sample complexity for coherence detection using amplitude amplification.
Efficient estimation of upper bounds on geometric coherence with linear sample complexity.
Protocols tolerate a certain level of noise while maintaining detection and estimation capabilities.
Abstract
The detection and characterization of quantum coherence is of fundamental importance both in the foundations of quantum theory as well as for the rapidly developing field of quantum technologies, where coherence has been linked to quantum advantage. Typical approaches for detecting coherence employ {\it coherence witnesses} -- observable quantities whose expectation value can be used to certify the presence of coherence. By design, coherence witnesses are only able to detect coherence for some, but not all, possible states of a quantum system. In this work we construct protocols capable of detecting the presence of coherence in an {\it unknown} pure quantum state . Having access to copies of an unknown pure state we show that the sample complexity of any experimental procedure for detecting coherence with constant probability of success is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
