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Q3mini

Guides

  • Fermionic Quantum Computation
  • Q3: Symbolic Quantum Simulation
  • Quantum Information Systems
  • Quantum Many-Body Systems
  • Quantum Spin Systems

Tech Notes

  • About Q3
  • Q3: Quick Start
  • Quantum Fourier Transform
  • Quantum Information Systems with Q3
  • Quantum Many-Body Systems with Q3
  • Quantum Operations
  • Quantum Spin Systems with Q3
  • Quantum States
  • Quantum Teleportation
  • Quick Quantum Computing with Q3

Symbols

  • Basis
  • Boson
  • Bra
  • CNOT
  • ControlledGate
  • ExpressionFor
  • Fermion
  • Heisenberg
  • Ket
  • Let
  • Majorana
  • Matrix
  • Multiply
  • NambuGreen
  • NambuHermitian
  • NambuMatrix
  • NambuUnitary
  • Pauli
  • Phase
  • QuantumCircuit
  • Qubit
  • Qudit
  • RandomWickCircuitSimulate
  • Rotation
  • Species
  • Spin
  • SWAP
  • WickCircuit
  • WickEntanglementEntropy
  • WickEntropy
  • WickGreenFunction
  • WickJump
  • WickLindbladSolve
  • WickLogarithmicNegativity
  • WickMeasurement
  • WickMonitor
  • WickMutualInformation
  • WickNonunitary
  • WickSimulate
  • WickState
  • WickUnitary

Overviews

  • The Postulates of Quantum Mechanics
  • Quantum Algorithms
  • Quantum Computation: Models
  • Quantum Computation: Overview
  • Quantum Error-Correction Codes
  • Quantum Information Theory
  • Quantum Noise and Decoherence

Quantum Information Theory

How many (classical or quantum) bits would we need in order to store information from a given source? How much information could we reliably transmit via a noisy communication channel? What are the minimal resources necessary to transform one form of information into another? These are the key questions that information theory, classical or quantum, addresses. In essence, it is concerned with identifying and quantifying fundamental resources—but not specific methods, such as algorithms, or equipment—for generating, storing, manipulating, and transmitting the information. Information refers to the state of a physical system, and as Landauer (1991) uttered, it is physical. As such, the answers to the above questions must be different depending on the underlying physical principles. Quantum information theory is concerned with quantum mechanics. This new principle enriches classical information theory that is based on classical mechanics, bringing about fresh possibilities.
This collection of tutorial documents starts by introducing the notion of entropy, first classical and then quantum entropies. The entropy quantifies information and is the most fundamental concept in information theory. The collection next discusses quantum entanglement as a physical resource. As mentioned above, quantum information theory is far richer than its classical counterpart. Among many fundamental and technical differences, quantum entanglement makes the most striking one, as an intriguing resource that is not available in classical information. Not surprisingly, quantum entanglement forms the vast majority of topics studied in quantum information theory.
This collection aims to be a quick introduction to quantum information theory. It surveys only the most basic notions and ideas of quantum information theory. Unlike more traditional disciplines of physics, quantum information theory could look rather disordered or disoriented, especially when encountered at first, full of seemingly unrelated subjects. Once accustomed to the basic ideas and concepts introduced in this chapter, one can delve deeper into various advanced subjects by resorting to other more specialized texts including Chapters 11 and 12 of Nielsen & Chuang (2011).
See also Chapter 7 of the
Quantum Workbook (2022)
.
Shannon Entropy
Definition
Relative Entropy
Mutual Information
Data Compression
Von Neumann Entropy
Definition
Quantum Relative Entropy
Quantum Mutual Information
Entanglement and Entropy
Quantum Entanglement
Separability Tests
Entanglement Distillation
Entanglement Measures
Appendix
Distance Measures between Quantum States
RelatedGuides
▪
Quantum Information Systems
RelatedTechNotes
▪
Distance Measures between Quantum States
▪
Quantum Noise and Decoherence
▪
Quantum Information Systems with Q3
RelatedLinks
▪
R. Landauer (1991)
, Physics Today 44 (5), 23 (1991), “Information is Physical.”
▪
M. Nielsen and I. L. Chuang (2022)
, Quantum Computation and Quantum Information (Cambridge University Press).
▪
Mahn-Soo Choi (2022)
, A Quantum Computation Workbook (Springer).
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