Randomized channel-state duality
ORAL
Abstract
Channel-state duality is a central result in quantum information science. It refers to the correspondence between a dynamical process (quantum channel) and a static quantum state in an enlarged Hilbert space. Since the corresponding dual state is generally mixed, it is described by a Hermitian matrix. In this talk, we present a randomized channel-state duality. In other words, a quantum channel is represented by a collection of $N$ pure quantum states that are produced from a random source. The accuracy of this randomized duality relation is given by $1/N$, with regard to an appropriate distance measure. For large systems, $N$ is much smaller than the dimension of the exact dual matrix of the quantum channel. This provides a highly accurate low-rank approximation of any quantum channel, and, as a consequence of the duality relation, an efficient data compression scheme for mixed quantum states. We demonstrate these two immediate applications of the randomized channel-state duality with a chaotic $1$-dimensional spin system.
*This work was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research, through the Quantum Internet to Accelerate Scientific Discovery Program, and in part by U.S. Department of Energy under the LDRD program at Los Alamos. B.Y. also acknowledges support from the Center for Nonlinear Studies.
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Publication: arXiv:2210.03723 [quant-ph]
Presenters
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Bin Yan
- Los Alamos National Laboratory