The Significance of the $C$-Numerical Range and the Local $C$-Numerical Range in Quantum Control and Quantum Information
Thomas Schulte-Herbrueggen, Gunther Dirr, Uwe Helmke, and Steffen J., Glaser

TL;DR
This paper explores the role of C-numerical ranges and local C-numerical ranges in quantum control and information, revealing their complex geometry and applications in optimizing quantum interactions and entanglement witnesses.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of local C-numerical range with unique geometric properties and demonstrates their use in quantum control tasks and quantum information processing.
Findings
Local C-numerical range is neither star-shaped nor simply connected.
Gradient flow methods effectively optimize quantum control and entanglement witnesses.
Applications include inverting quantum interactions and constrained quantum optimization.
Abstract
This paper shows how C-numerical-range related new strucures may arise from practical problems in quantum control--and vice versa, how an understanding of these structures helps to tackle hot topics in quantum information. We start out with an overview on the role of C-numerical ranges in current research problems in quantum theory: the quantum mechanical task of maximising the projection of a point on the unitary orbit of an initial state onto a target state C relates to the C-numerical radius of A via maximising the trace function |\tr \{C^\dagger UAU^\dagger\}|. In quantum control of n qubits one may be interested (i) in having U\in SU(2^n) for the entire dynamics, or (ii) in restricting the dynamics to {\em local} operations on each qubit, i.e. to the n-fold tensor product SU(2)\otimes SU(2)\otimes >...\otimes SU(2). Interestingly, the latter then leads to a novel entity, the {\em…
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