Quantum Information (WS 21/22)

Lecture: PH1010 QST Theory

Lecturer: Prof. Ignacio Cirac

Content

The course "PH1010 QST Theory: Quantum Information" offers an introduction to the theoretical foundations of Quantum Science and Technology. The course starts with a brief motivation and an introduction to fundamental concepts and the basic formalism (pure/mixed states, evolution, completely positive maps, measurements Schmidt decomposition, tomography, quantum estimation, hypothesis testing). Then the concept of entanglement is discussed in detail, including the distinction between pure and mixed-state entanglement, entanglement entropy, quantification and conversion. Subsequently, some of the revolutionary promises of exploiting entanglement are presented, including dense coding, quantum teleportation and quantum cryptography. Next the Bell inequalities, characterizing the quantum weirdness of entanglement and non-locality, are introduced and discussed in detail. Subsequent chapters cover central applications of quantum information theory: quantum computation, quantum algorithms such as those of Deutsch, Shor and Grover, quantum simulation, and quantum metrology. Final core topics are decoherence, Lindbladian descriptions thereof, and error correction schemes to counteract the consequences of decoherence and protect fragile quantum information. The module will typically also include one or more optional topics, such as many-body entanglement, topological quantum computation, quantum complexity, or tensor networks, which link quantum information theory to many-body physics.

 

General Literature

Standard articles, textbooks, and lecture notes on Quantum Information are:

  • Quantum Computation Pfeil (Lecture Notes), John Preskill. A famous set of lecture notes, continually being refined throughout the last 20 years.
  • Quantum Computation and Quantum Information Pfeil, 10th Anniversary Edition, Michael A. Nielsen, Isaac L. Chuang, Cambridge University Press, 2010. One of the most cited books in physics of all time, providing a general, accessible and wide-ranging introduction to the topic.

 

Material

Date Content
Nov 3th Chapter 0: Linear Algebra for Q. Information
Nov 4th Chapter 1: Basic Concepts in Q. Information
Part 1: Single systems: Introduction, States
Nov 5th Chapter 1: Basic Concepts in Q. Information
Part 1 (cont): States, Observables & Measurements
Nov 10th Chapter 1: Basic Concepts in Q. Information
Part 1 (cont): Evolution, General Dynamics,
Part 2: Composite Systems: Introduction, States
Nov 12th Chapter 1: Basic Concepts in Q. Information
Part 2 (cont): States, Observables & Measurements.
Nov 17th Chapter 1: Basic Concepts in Q. Information
Part 2 (cont): Evolution, General Dynamics.
Nov 19th Chapter 2: Entanglement and non-locality:
EPR "paradox", Bell's theorem, CHSH inequalities
Nov 24th Chapter 2: Entanglement and non-locality:
Bell's theorem without inequalitites, Noncontextuality, Causality
Nov 26th Chapter 3: Quantum Communication:
Part 1: Cryptography: Classical Cryptograph, Quantum Key Distribution
Dec 1st Chapter 3: Quantum Communication:
Part 1 (cont): Eavesdropping
Dec 3rd Chapter 3: Quantum Communication:
Part 2: Complexity: Classical, Quantum
Dec 8th Chapter 3: Quantum Communication:
Part 3: Repeaters: Imperfections, Basic concepts
Dec 10th Chapter 3: Quantum Communication:
Part 3: Repeaters (cont): Entanglement distillation, Repeaters
Dec 15th Chapter 4: Quantum Computing:
Part 1: Basics: Classical computing, Quantum computing basics
Dec 17th Chapter 4: Quantum Computing:
Part 1: Basics (cont): Quantum circuits, Complexity
Dec 22nd Chapter 4: Quantum Computing:
Part 2: Quantum algorithms: with and without oracles
Jan 7th Chapter 4: Part 2: Quantum algorithms: Phase estimation, amplitude amplificatin, quantum simulation
Jan 12th Chapter 4: Part 2: Quantum algorithms: Adiabatic, variational, other computational models
Jan 14th Chapter 4: Part 3: Quantum error correction: Classical, simple QEC: flips and phases, general QEC
Jan 18th Chapter 4: Part 3: Quantum error correction: Stabilizer Codes, Fault-tolerant error correction
Jan 20th Chapter 5: Quantum metrology: Atomic clocks, Fisher Information, Quantum Fisher Information, Cramer-Rao bounds
Jan 26th POVMs: axiomatic & operational description, Naimark's theorem, applications in (unambiguous) state discrimination and information transmission
Jan 29th Quantum channels: tpcp maps, Choi-Jamiolkowski matrix, Kraus representation, environment representation, dephasing/entanglement breaking channels
Feb 2nd Entanglement: correlations, separability, witnesses, positive map criteria, DeFinetti characterization, basic entanglement measures & their relations, bound entanglement
Feb 4th Period finding: Simon's algorithm, collision problem, Shor's algorithm, hidden subgroup problems

 

More Material (e.g. Videos of the lectures) can be found on Moodle.

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