In superdense teleportation of
quantum information, Alice (near) selects a particular set of states to
send to Bob (far), using the hyperentangled pair of photons they share.
The possible states Alice may send are represented as the points on a
donut shape, here artistically depicted in sharp relief from the cloudy
silhouette of general quantum state that surrounds them. To transmit a
state, Alice makes a measurement on her half of the entangled state,
which has four possible outcomes shown by red, green, blue, and yellow
points. She then communicates the outcome of her measurement (in this
case, yellow, represented by the orange streak connecting the two
donuts) to Bob using a classical information channel. Bob then can make a
corrective rotation on his state to recover the state that Alice sent.
Credit: Image by Precision Graphics, copyright Paul Kwiat, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Putting a hole in the center of the
donut -- a mid-nineteenth-century invention -- allows the deep-fried
pastry to cook evenly, inside and out. As it turns out, the hole in the
center of the donut also holds answers for a type of more efficient and
reliable quantum information teleportation, a critical goal for quantum
information science.
Quantum teleportation is a method of communicating information from
one location to another without moving the physical matter to which the
information is attached. Instead, the sender (Alice) and the receiver
(Bob) share a pair of entangled elementary particles -- in this
experiment, photons, the smallest units of light -- that transmit
information through their shared quantum state. In simplified terms,
Alice encodes information in the form of the quantum state of her
photon. She then sends a key to Bob over traditional communication
channels, indicating what operation he must perform on his photon to
prepare the same quantum state, thus teleporting the information.
Quantum teleportation has been achieved by a number of research teams
around the globe since it was first theorized in 1993, but current
experimental methods require extensive resources and/or only work
successfully a fraction of the time.
Now, by taking advantage of the mathematical properties intrinsic to
the shape of a donut -- or torus, in mathematical terminology -- a
research team led by physicist Paul Kwiat of the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign has made great strides by realizing "superdense
teleportation." This new protocol, developed by coauthor physicist
Herbert Bernstein of Hampshire College in Amherst, MA, effectively
reduces the resources and effort required to teleport quantum
information, while at the same time improving the reliability of the
information transfer.
In superdense teleportation of quantum information, Alice (near)
selects a particular set of states to send to Bob (far), using the
hyperentangled pair of photons they share. The possible states Alice may
send are represented as the points on a donut shape, here artistically
depicted in sharp relief from the cloudy silhouette of general quantum
state that surrounds them. To transmit a state, Alice makes a
measurement on her half of the entangled state, which has four possible
outcomes shown by red, green, blue, and yellow points. She then
communicates the outcome of her measurement (in this case, yellow,
represented by the orange streak connecting the two donuts) to Bob using
a classical information channel. Bob then can make a corrective
rotation on his state to recover the state that Alice sent.
With this new protocol, the researchers have experimentally achieved
88 percent transmission fidelity, twice the classical upper limit of 44
percent. The protocol uses pairs of photons that are "hyperentangled" --
simultaneously entangled in more than one state variable, in this case
in polarization and in orbital angular momentum -- with a restricted
number of possible states in each variable. In this way, each photon can
carry more information than in earlier quantum teleportation
experiments.
At the same time, this method makes Alice's measurements and Bob's
transformations far more efficient than their corresponding operations
in quantum teleportation: the number of possible operations being sent
to Bob as the key has been reduced, hence the term "superdense."
Kwiat explains, "In classical computing, a unit of information,
called a bit, can have only one of two possible values -- it's either a
zero or a one. A quantum bit, or qubit, can simultaneously hold many
values, arbitrary superpositions of 0 and 1 at the same time, which
makes faster, more powerful computing systems possible.
"So a qubit could be represented as a point on a sphere, and to
specify what state it is, one would need longitude and latitude. That's a
lot of information compared to just a 0 or a 1."
"What makes our new scheme work is a restrictive set of states. The
analog would be, instead of using a sphere, we are going to use a torus,
or donut shape. A sphere can only rotate on an axis, and there is no
way to get an opposite point for every point on a sphere by rotating it
-- because the axis points, the north and the south, don't move. With a
donut, if you rotate it 180 degrees, every point becomes its opposite.
Instead of axis points you have a donut hole. Another advantage, the
donut shape actually has more surface area than the sphere,
mathematically speaking -- this means it has more distinct points that
can be used as encoded information."
Lead author, Illinois physics doctoral candidate Trent Graham,
comments, "We are constrained to sending a certain class of quantum
states called 'equimodular' states. We can deterministically perform
operations on this constrained set of states, which are impossible to
perfectly perform with completely general quantum states. Deterministic
describes a definite outcome, as opposed to one that is probabilistic.
With existing technologies, previous photonic quantum teleportation
schemes either cannot work every time or require extensive experimental
resources. Our new scheme could work every time with simple
measurements."
This research team is part of a broader collaboration that is working
toward realizing quantum communication from a space platform, such as
the International Space Station, to an optical telescope on Earth. The
collaboration -- Kwiat, Graham, Bernstein, physicist Jungsang Kim of
Duke University in Durham, NC, and scientist Hamid Javadi of NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, CA -- recently received funding from
NASA Headquarter's Space Communication and Navigation program (with
project directors Badri Younes and Barry Geldzahler) to explore the
possibility.
"It would be a stepping stone toward building a quantum
communications network, a system of nodes on Earth and in space that
would enable communication from any node to any other node," Kwiat
explains. "For this, we're experimenting with different quantum state
properties that would be less susceptible to air turbulence
disruptions."
The team's recent experimental findings are published in the May 28, 2015 issue of Nature Communications,
and represent the collaborative effort Kwiat, Graham, and Bernstein, as
well as physicist Tzu-Chieh Wei of State University of New York at
Stony Brook, and mathematician Marius Junge of the University of
Illinois.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
University of Illinois College of Engineering.
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