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Quantum cloning is a fundamental protocol of quantum information theory. Perfect universal quantum cloning is prohibited by the laws of quantum mechanics, only imperfect copies being reachable. Symmetric quantum cloning is concerned with case when the quality of the clones is identical. In this work, we study the general case of $1 \to N$ asymmetric cloning, where one asks for arbitrary qualities of the clones. We characterize, for all Hilbert space dimensions and number of clones, the set of all possible clone qualities. This set is realized as the nonnegative part of the unit ball of a newly introduced norm, which we call the $\mathcal{Q}$-norm. We also provide a closed form expression for the quantum cloner achieving a given clone quality vector. Our analysis relies on the Schur-Weyl duality and on the study of the spectral properties of partially transposed permutation operators.
In the quest for robust and universal quantum devices, the notion of simulation plays a crucial role, both from a theoretical and from an applied perspective. In this work, we go beyond the simulation of quantum channels and quantum measurements, studying what it means to simulate a collection of measurements, which we call a multimeter. To this end, we first explicitly characterize the completely positive transformations between multimeters. However, not all of these transformations correspond to valid simulations, as evidenced by the existence of maps that always prepare the same multimeter regardless of the input, which we call trash-and-prepare. We give a new definition of multimeter simulations as transformations that are triviality-preserving, i.e., when given a multimeter consisting of trivial measurements they can only produce another trivial multimeter. In the absence of a quantum ancilla, we then characterize the transformations that are triviality-preserving and the transformations that are trash-and-prepare. Finally, we use these characterizations to compare our new definition of multimeter simulation to three existing ones: classical simulations, compression of multimeters, and compatibility-preserving simulations.
We introduce the Ising Network Opinion Formation (INOF) model and apply it for the analysis of networks of 6 Wikipedia language editions. In the model, Ising spins are placed at network nodes/articles and the steady-state opinion polarization of spins is determined from the Monte Carlo iterations in which a given spin orientation is determined by in-going links from other spins. The main consideration is done for opinion confrontation between {\it capitalism, imperialism} (blue opinion) and {\it socialism, communism} (red opinion). These nodes have fixed spin/opinion orientation while other nodes achieve their steady-state opinions in the process of Monte Carlo iterations. We find that the global network opinion favors {\it socialism, communism} for all 6 editions. The model also determines the opinion preferences for world countries and political leaders, showing good agreement with heuristic expectations. We also present results for opinion competition between {\it Christianity} and {\it Islam}, and USA Democratic and Republican parties. We argue that the INOF approach can find numerous applications for directed complex networks.
Communication complexity quantifies how difficult it is for two distant computers to evaluate a function f(X,Y), where the strings X and Y are distributed to the first and second computer respectively, under the constraint of exchanging as few bits as possible. Surprisingly, some nonlocal boxes, which are resources shared by the two computers, are so powerful that they allow to collapse communication complexity, in the sense that any Boolean function f can be correctly estimated with the exchange of only one bit of communication. The Popescu-Rohrlich (PR) box is an example of such a collapsing resource, but a comprehensive description of the set of collapsing nonlocal boxes remains elusive. In this work, we carry out an algebraic study of the structure of wirings connecting nonlocal boxes, thus defining the notion of the "product of boxes" P⊠Q, and we show related associativity and commutativity results. This gives rise to the notion of the "orbit of a box", unveiling surprising geometrical properties about the alignment and parallelism of distilled boxes. The power of this new framework is that it allows us to prove previously-reported numerical observations concerning the best way to wire consecutive boxes, and to numerically and analytically recover recently-identified noisy PR boxes that collapse communication complexity for different types of noise models.
Sujets
Structure
Adaptive filters
7215Rn
Quantum many-body interaction
Algebra
2DRank algorithm
Statistical description
Chaos
Wikipedia
Qubit
Decoherence
Asymmetry
Wikipedia networks
0545Mt
Quantum denoiser
6470qj
Fidelity
Many-body problem
Directed networks
Poincare recurrences
Hilbert space
Atom laser
Information theory
Clonage
Amplification
Adaptative denoiser
Covariance
Random
Dark matter
Quantum denoising
Duality
Disordered Systems and Neural Networks cond-matdis-nn
Denoising
Toy model
Solar System
Ordinateur quantique
Nonlinearity
Quantum mechanics
Random graphs
Quantum Physics quant-ph
Quantum computation
Networks
PageRank
Mécanique quantique
Localization
CheiRank algorithm
Community structure
Interférence
World trade network
Unitarity
Aubry transition
CheiRank
PageRank algorithm
Chaos quantique
Adaptive transformation
Deep learning
Critical phenomena
World trade
2DEAG
Markov chains
Opinion formation
Dynamical chaos
Cloning
Complex networks
Google matrix
Wikipedia network
Chaotic systems
Spin
Adaptive transform
Random matrix theory
Entropy
Model
Semiclassical
Correlation
Semi-classique
Chaotic dynamics
ADMM
Wigner crystal
Unfolding
Quantum image processing
Social networks
Adaptive signal and image representation
2DRank
International trade
Super-Resolution
Entanglement
Quantum chaos
Matrix model
Numerical calculations
Calcul quantique
0375-b
Harper model
Information quantique
Anderson localization
Plug-and-Play
ANDREAS BLUHM
Quantum information
2DEG
Husimi function
FOS Physical sciences