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Alice and Bob’s Excellent Adventure Presented by: Lacie Zimmerman Adam Serdar Jacquie Otto Paul Weiss What’s to Come… • Brief Review of Quantum Mechanics • Quantum Circuits/Gates • No-Cloning • Distinguishability of Quantum States • Superdense Coding • Quantum Teleportation Dirac Bra-Ket Notation Notation Inner Products Outer Products Bra-Ket Notation Involves Vector Xn can be represented two ways Ket Bra |n> <n| = |n>t v w x y z v w x y z * * * * * * m is the complex conjugate of m. Inner Products An Inner Product is a Bra multiplied by a Ket <a| |b> can be simplified to <a|b> <a|b> = v * w* x* y* z * l m n = lv * mw* nx* oy* pz* o p Outer Products An Outer Product is a Ket multiplied by a Bra l lv * lw* * * m mv mw n * * * * * * * |a><b| = = nv nw v w x y z o ov* ow* * * p pv pw By Definition a b c bc a lx * ly * lz * * * * mx my mz * * * nx ny nz * * * ox oy oz * * * px py pz • State Space: The inner product space V C associated with an isolated quantum system. n •The system at any given time is described by a “state”, which is a unit vector in V. (Qubit) • Simplest state space - V C If | 0 and | 1 form a basis for V, then an arbitrary qubit state has the form | x a | 0 b | 1 , where a and b in C 2 2 have | a | | b | 1 . 2 • Qubit state differs from a bit because “superpositions” of a qubit state are possible. The evolution of an isolated quantum system is described by a unitary operator on its state space. The state | (t1 ) is related to the state | (t2 ) by a unitary operator U t1,t2 . i.e., | (t2 ) U t ,t | (t1 ) 1 2 Quantum measurements are described by a finite set of projections, {Pm}, acting on the state space of the system being measured. • If | is the state of the system immediately before the measurement. •Then the probability that the result m occurs is given by p(m) | Pm | . • If the result m occurs, then the state of the system immediately after the measurement is Pm | Pm | 1/ 2 | Pm | p(m) • The state space of a composite quantum system is the tensor product of the state of its components. • If the systems numbered 1 through n are prepared in states | (ti ), i = 1,…, n, then the joint state of the total composite system is | 1 | n . Quantum Uncertainty and Quantum Circuits Classical Circuits vs. Quantum Circuits Hadamard Gates C-not Gates Bell States Other Important Quantum Circuit Items Classical Circuits vs. Quantum Circuits Classical Circuits based upon bits, which are represented with on and off states. These states are usually alternatively represented by 1 and 0 respectively. The medium of transportation of a bit is a conductive material, usually a copper wire or something similar. The 1 or 0 is represented with 2 different levels of current through the wire. Circuits Continued… Quantum circuits use electron “spin” to hold their information, instead of the conductor that a classical circuit uses. While a classical circuit uses transistors to perform logic, quantum circuits use “quantum gates” such as the Hadamard Gates. Hadamard Gates Hadamard Gates can perform logic and are usually used to initialize states and to add random information to a circuit. Hadamard Gates are represented mathematically by the Hadamard Matrix which is below. 1 H 2 1 1 1 1 Circuit Diagram of a Hadamard Gate When represented in a Quantum Circuit Diagram, a Hadamard Gate looks like this: x H y Where the x is the input qubit and the y is the output qubit. C-Not Gates C-not Gates are one of the basic 2-qubit gates in quantum computing. C-not is short for controlled not, which means that one qubit (target qubit) is flipped if the other qubit (control qubit) is |1>, otherwise the target qubit is left alone. The mathematical representation of a C-Not Gate is below. 1 0 0 0 U CN 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 Circuit Diagram of a C-Not Gate When represented in a Quantum Circuit Diagram, a C-Not Gate looks like this: x x y x y Where x is the control qubit and y is the target qubit. Bell States Bell States are sets of qubits that are entangled. They can be created with the following Quantum Circuit called a Bell State Generator: x H xy y With H being a Hadamard Gate and x and y being the input qubits. is the Bell State. Bell State Equations The following equations map the previous Bell State Generator: 1 00 00 1 00 11 00 2 2 1 01 11 1 01 10 01 01 2 2 1 00 10 1 00 11 10 10 2 2 00 11 1 01 11 1 01 10 11 2 2 So we can write: 0 y 1 1y x xy 2 Other Important Quantum Circuit Items • Controlled U-Gates • Measurement Devices Controlled U-Gate A Controlled U-Gate is an extension of a C-Not Gate. Where a C-Not Gate works on one qubit based upon a control qubit, a U-Gate works on many qubits based upon a control qubit. A Controlled U-Gate can be represented with the following diagram: n U n Where n is the number of qubits the gate is acting on. Measurement Devices These devices convert a qubit state into a probabilistic classical bit. It can be represented in a diagram with the following: M x A measurement with x possible outcomes has x wires coming from the device that measures it. Cloning of a Quantum State Cloning Can copying of an unknown qubit state really happen? By copy we mean: 1. Take a quantum state Z 2. Perform an operation 3. End with an exact copy of Z Using a Classical Idea • A classical CNOT gate can be used for an unknown bit x • Let x be the control bit and 0 be the target • Send x0 xx where is a CNOT gate • Yields an exact copy of x in the classical setting Move the Logic to Quantum States • Given a qubit in an unknown quantum state Z such that Z a 0 b 1 • Through a CNOT gate we take Z 0 Z Z such that (a 0 b 1 ) 0 a 00 b 10 • Note if indeed we copied Z we would thus end up with Z Z which would equal a² 00 ab 01 ab 10 b² 11 Limits on Copying Note that: a 00 b 10 a² 00 ab 01 ab 10 b² 11 only at ab=0 and for a and b being 0 or 1 Proving the difficulty of cloning • Suppose there was a copying machine • Such that Z can be copied with a standard state S • This gives an initial state Z S which when the unitary operation U is applied yields U Z S Z Z …difficulty cloning • Let U( z s ) z z & U( y s ) y y • By taking inner products of both sides: zy zy² • From this we can see that: z y = 0 or 1 • Therefore this must be true: z y or z y • Thus if the machine can successfully copy z it is highly unlikely that the machine will copy an arbitrary unknown state y unless y is orthogonal to z Final cloning summary • Cloning is improbable. • Basically all that can be accomplished is what we know as a cut-n-paste. • Original data is lost. • The process of this will be shown in the teleportation section soon to follow. Distinguishability • To determine the state of an element in the set: y1 , y 2 ,..., y n • This must be true: - y1 y2 ... yn • Finding the probability of observing a specific state ym , let Pm be the measurement such that Pm y m y m Distinguishability cont. • Then the probability that m will be observed is: - P(m) y m | Pm | y m • Which yields P(m) ym ym ym ym • Because the set is orthogonal - P(m) 11 1 • If the set was not orthogonal we couldn’t know for certain that m will be observed. Cloning and Distinguishability • Take some quantum information • Send it from one place to another • Original is destroyed because it can’t just be cloned (copied) • Basically it must be combined with some orthogonal group or distinguishing the quantum state with absolute certainty is impossible. • Pauli Matrices • Alice & Bob • The Conditions • How it Works 0 1 X 1 0 0 i Y i 0 1 0 Z 0 1 THE CONDITIONS… • Alice and Bob are a long way from one another. • Alice wants to transmit some classical information in the form of a 2-bit to Bob. HOW IT WORKS… • Alice and Bob initially share a 2-qubit in the entangled Bell state 00 11 2 which is just a pair of quantum particles. HOW IT WORKS… • is a fixed state and it is not necessary for Alice to send any qubits to Bob to prepare this state. • For example, a third party may prepare the entangled state ahead of time, sending one of the qubits to Alice and the other to Bob. HOW IT WORKS… 1) Alice keeps the first qubit (particle). 2) Bob keeps the second qubit (particle). 3) Bob moves far away from Alice. HOW IT WORKS… • The 2-bit that Alice wishes to send to Bob determines what quantum gate she must apply to her qubit before she sends it to Bob. The four resulting states are: 00 : 00 , 01 : ( ) 01 , 10 : 10 , 11 : (i ) 11 . HOW IT WORKS… • Since Bob is in possession of both qubits, he can perform a measurement on this Bell basis and reliably determine which of the four possible 2-bits Alice sent. Teleportation What is it used for? Teleportation Circuit Teleportation •Teleportation is sending unknown quantum information not classical information. •Teleportation starts just like Superdense coding. •Alice and Bob each take half of the 2-qubit Bell state: 00 00 11 / 2 •Alice takes the first qubit (particle) and Bob moves with the other particle to another location. Teleportation •Alice wants to teleport to Bob: •She combines the qubit with her half of the Bell state and sends the resulting 3-qubit (the 2 qubits-Alice & 1 qubit-Bob) through the Teleportation circuit (shown on the next slide): Teleportation Circuit Single line denotes quantum information being transmitted Double line denotes classical info being transmitted 00 H { M1 M2 Xy 0 1 2 Zx 3 Top 2 wires represent Alice's system Bottom wire represents Bob’s system 4 Teleportation Circuit 00 H { 0 M1 M2 Xy 1 2 3 Zx 4 Initial State a 0 b1 0 00 1 a 0 00 11 b 1 00 11 2 C-Not gate Teleportation Circuit H 00 { 0 M1 M2 Xy 1 2 3 Zx 4 After Applying the C-Not gate to Alice’s bits: 1 a 0 00 11 b 1 10 01 1 2 Teleportation Circuit Hadamard gate 00 H { 0 M1 M2 Xy 1 2 3 Zx 4 After applying the Hadamard gate to the first qubit: 2 1 2 00 a 0 b 1 01 a 1 b 0 10 a 0 b 1 11 a 1 b 0 Teleportation Circuit Measurement devices 00 H { 0 M1 M2 Xy 1 2 3 Zx 4 After Alice observes/measures her 2 qubits, she sends the resulting classical information to Bob: 00 3 a 0 b 1 , 01 3 a 1 b 0 , 10 3 a 0 b 1 , 11 3 a 1 b 0 . Teleportation Circuit 00 H { 0 M1 M2 Xy 1 2 3 Zx 4 Bob applies the appropriate quantum gate to his qubit based on the classical information from Alice: 00 : Z 0 X 0 3 I 3 4 , 01 : Z 0 X 1 3 aX 1 bX 0 a 0 b 1 4 , 10 : Z 1 X 0 3 aZ 0 bZ 1 a 0 b 1 4 , 11 : Z 1 X 1 3 Z aX 1 bX 0 aZ 0 bZ 1 a 0 b 1 4 . Teleportation Bob finally recovers the initial qubit 4 that Alice teleported to him. Conclusion • Brief Review of Quantum Mechanics • Quantum Circuits/Gates – – – – Classical Gates vs. Quantum Gates Hadamard Gates C-not Gates Bell States Conclusion, cont. • No-Cloning • Distinguishability of Quantum States • Superdense Coding - Pauli Matrices - The Conditions - How it Works Conclusion, cont. • Quantum Teleportation - What is it used for? - Teleportation Circuit Bibliography http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inner_product_space http://vergil.chemistry.gatech.edu/notes/quantrev/node14.html http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_operator http://vergil.chemistry.gatech.edu/notes/quantrev/node17.html http://www.doc.ic.ad.uk/~nd/surprise_97/journal/vol4/spb3/ http://www-theory.chem.washington.edu/~trstedl/quantum/quantum.html Gudder, S. (2003-March). Quantum Computation. American Mathmatical Monthly. 110, no. 3,181-188. Special Thanks to: Dr. Steve Deckelman