Title
Computer Algebra: A `Classical' Path to Explore Decoherence and Entanglement Phenomena in Quantum Information Theory
Abstract
During the past decade, quantum information theory has attracted a lot of interest because of its promise for solving problems that are intractable otherwise. Despite of the recent advancements in understanding the basic principles of quantum information systems, however, there are still a large number of difficulties to be resolved. One of the great challenges concerns for instance the decoherence in quantum systems and how entanglement is lost or transfered between the subsystems, if they are coupled to their enviroment. -- To overcome these difficulties, several schemes for studying the decay of quantum states and their interaction with an environment have been developed during recent years, including a large variety of separability and entanglement measures, decoherence-free subspaces as well as (quantum) error correction codes.To support the investigation of entanglement and decoherence phenomena in general N 驴qubit quantum systems, we recently developed the Feynman program [1], a computer-algebraic approach within the framework of Maple, which facilitates the symbolic and numerical manipulation of quantum registers and quantum transformations. This program has been designed for studying the dynamics of quantum registers owing to their interaction with external fields and perturbations. In a recent addition to this program [2], moreover, we now implemented also various noise models as well as a number of entanglement measures (and related quantities). In this lecture, I shall display the interactive use of the program by a number of simple but intuitive examples.To make quantum information theory alive, an active (re-) search has been initiated during the past decade to find and explore physical systems that are suitable to produce and control the entanglement in course of their time evolution. In atomic photoionization, for instance, we have shown how the polarization can be transfered from the incoming photons to the emitted photoelectrons, giving rise to a (spin-spin) entanglement between the photoelectron and the remaining (photo-) ion. Detailed computations on the entanglement as function of the energy and polarization of the incoming light have been carried out along various isoelectronic sequences [3]. For the two-photon decay of atomic hydrogen, moreover, we analyzed the geometrical control of the polarization entanglement of the emitted photons.
Year
DOI
Venue
2007
10.1007/978-3-540-75187-8_11
CASC '07 Proceedings of the 10th international workshop on Computer Algebra in Scientific Computing
Keywords
Field
DocType
quantum register,past decade,qubit quantum system,quantum information theory,quantum state,polarization entanglement,quantum system,entanglement measure,Computer Algebra,Explore Decoherence,quantum information system,Quantum Information Theory,Entanglement Phenomena,quantum transformation
Quantum technology,Quantum mechanics,Quantum sensor,Computer science,Mathematical analysis,Theoretical physics,Squashed entanglement,Quantum metrology,Quantum discord,Quantum channel,Quantum error correction,Quantum capacity
Conference
Volume
ISSN
ISBN
4770
0302-9743
3-540-75186-6
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
1
Authors
1
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Stephan Fritzsche152.64