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arxiv: 1012.0115 · v1 · pith:6RGCQ62Xnew · submitted 2010-12-01 · 🪐 quant-ph

Test of Common Sense in Quantum Copying Process

classification 🪐 quant-ph
keywords inputqualitystatescommoninformationpriorisenseclones
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It is believed that the more we have {\it a priori} information on input states, the better we can make the quality of clones in quantum cloning machines. This common sense idea was confirmed several years ago by analyzing a situation, where the input state is either one of two non-orthogonal states. If the {\it a priori} information is measured by the Shannon entropy, common sense predicts that the quality of the clone becomes poorer with increasing $N$, where $N$ is the number of possible input states. We show, however, that the {\it a priori} information measured by the Shannon entropy does not affect the quality of the clones. Instead the no-cloning theorem and `denseness' of the possible input states play important roles in determining the quality. Specifically, the factor `denseness' plays a more crucial role than the no-cloning theorem when $N \geq 3$.

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