Quantum information theory
read the original abstract
Quantum information theory is the study of the achievable limits of information processing within quantum mechanics. Many different types of information can be accommodated within quantum mechanics, including classical information, coherent quantum information, and entanglement. Exploring the rich variety of capabilities allowed by these types of information is the subject of quantum information theory, and of this Dissertation. In particular, I demonstrate several novel limits to the information processing ability of quantum mechanics. Results of especial interest include: the demonstration of limitations to the class of measurements which may be performed in quantum mechanics; a capacity theorem giving achievable limits to the transmission of classical information through a two-way noiseless quantum channel; resource bounds on distributed quantum computation; a new proof of the quantum noiseless channel coding theorem; an information-theoretic characterization of the conditions under which quantum error-correction may be achieved; an analysis of the thermodynamic limits to quantum error-correction, and new bounds on channel capacity for noisy quantum channels.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 3 Pith papers
-
Quantum Entanglement Beyond Kinematics: A Dynamical Hypothesis in (3,2)-Dimensional Spacetime
Derives (3,2)-dimensional warped geometry from 5D vacuum Einstein equations to mediate entanglement via extra-time null geodesics and predicts cross-pair correlations scaling with separation ratio squared in two indep...
-
Quantum Entanglement Beyond Kinematics: A Dynamical Hypothesis in (3,2)-Dimensional Spacetime
Derives (3,2)-spacetime framework from 5D geometry where extra-time null geodesics mediate entanglement, predicting cross-pair correlations in multiple Bell pairs.
-
Towards an Optimally Distributed Quantum Fourier Transform Circuit
Presents an optimal gate-packing partitioning scheme for the QFT that aims to minimize e-bit count in distributed quantum systems and validates it on hardware.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.