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Photonic Systems Brown Bag Seminar
Thursday,
April 21, 2005, at 12 noon
RLE Haus Room, 36-428
Quantum
Communication: Why and How?
Mohsen Razavi
Quantum mechanics is
the best known model for describing physical phenomena at
microscopic scales. In this model, a quantum state,
represented mathematically by a vector in a Hilbert space,
is associated with a physical system. At any particular
time, this quatum state fully characterizes the physical system.
Some future applications, such as the networking of
quantum computers, require that a quantum state be transferred
from one place to another. This is what is known as
quantum communication. Quantum communication over long
distances is extremely challenging. Classical communication
alone does not suffice to transmit a quantum state.
This is because the quantum measurement principle states that
any observation of an unknown quantum state changes that state
in a non-reversible fashion, and the no-cloning theorem states
that it is impossible to duplicate - and hence characterize
by a series of measurements - an unknown quantum state.
Physical transportation of a quantum system over long distances
is highly impractical, at best, because decoherence arising
from interaction with the environment will almost surely destroy
the desired state. There is a theoretically viable
approach, however, for quantum communication. It is
known as teleportation, and it relies on entanglement (a quantum
resource) together with quantum measurement and classical
communication. This talk is an introduction to quantum communication.
It will describe the teleportation protocol for two-dimensional
quantum states---qubits. Some methods for implementing
this protocol, as being developed by a team of researchers
from MIT and Northwestern University will also be described.
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