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Introduction to Introduction to Quantum Quantum Teleportation Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008

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Page 1: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Introduction to Introduction to Quantum Quantum

TeleportationTeleportationBy Dumb Scientist

First created: May 15, 2007Last modified: October 29, 2008

Page 2: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Problems with Teleportation

The uncertainty principle forbids simultaneous measurements of non-commuting observables.

Consider trying to measure a simple system like the polarization state of a single photon:

Trying to measure and simply collapses the state, giving only 1 bit of information!

Page 3: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Problems with Teleportation

Only by performing repeated measurements on copies of the same state can and be determined with any accuracy.

This method cannot be applied to teleportation of unknown states because the “no-cloning” theorem1

forbids copying quantum states.

11 W.K. Wootters and W.H. Zurek, Nature 299, 802 (1982).

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Quantum Entanglement Two particles are said to be “entangled” if

measurements on one particle are correlated with measurements on the other particle. For example, the following singlet state is entangled:

or

Notice that measuring particle 1 puts particle 2 into a definite state:

Page 5: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

The “BBCJPW” Protocol In 1993, a method of teleporting a two-

state quantum system was published by six co-authors, collectively known as BBCJPW2.

Suppose Alice and Bob have already shared an entangled state:

Alice wants to give Bob the state

22 C. H. Bennett, G. Brassard, C. Crepeau, R. Jozsa, A. Pere and W. K. Wootters, Phys. Rev. Lett. 70, 1895 (1993).

Page 6: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

BBCJPW Protocol

Alice then measures particles 2 and 3 using the following basis:

Page 7: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

BBCJPW Protocol

Alice then measures particles 2 and 3 using the following basis:

Page 8: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

BBCJPW Protocol

Alice needs to tell Bob the result of her measurement (2 classical bits), which limits teleportation to light speed.

No energy or matter is transferred. The no-cloning theorem is not violated

because the state |3i has been destroyed.

Page 9: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Boschi Teleportation Experiment

In 1998, a team led by D. Boschi demonstrated3 quantum teleportation of polarization states of photons.

Key differences from the BBCJPW protocol: “Path” entanglement was used. A total of 2 photons were used- the state

to be teleported is “imprinted” on Alice’s EPR photon’s polarization state.

33 D. Boschi, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 80, 1121 (1998).

Page 10: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Boschi Teleportation Experiment

(Diagram adapted from [3])

Page 11: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Boschi Teleportation Experiment

(Diagram adapted from [3])

Page 12: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the
Page 13: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the
Page 14: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the
Page 15: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Alice measures photon #1 in this basis:

Page 16: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Alice measures photon #1 in this basis:

Half-wave plate in path b1 rotates polarization by 90º:

Page 17: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Alice measures photon #1 in this basis:

Half-wave plate in path b1 rotates polarization by 90º:

Page 18: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Alice measures photon #1 in this basis:

Half-wave plate in path b1 rotates polarization by 90º:

(+)

(-)

Page 19: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Alice measures photon #1 in this basis:

Half-wave plate in path b1 rotates polarization by 90º:

(+)

(-)

Page 20: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Alice measures photon #1 in this basis:

Half-wave plate in path b1 rotates polarization by 90º:

(+)

(-)

Page 21: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

(+)

(-)

Page 22: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

(+)

(-)

Page 23: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

(+)

(-)

If Bob is told which of Alice’s detectors clicked, he can use RB to rotate his photon’s polarization into an exact copy of Alice’s polarization state.

How do we verify that teleportation was successful?

Page 24: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

(+)

(-)

How do we verify that teleportation was successful?

Bob sets RB so it sends the teleported state to DB to measure a coincidence rate called

Page 25: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

(+)

(-)

How do we verify that teleportation was successful?

Bob sets RB so it sends the teleported state to DB to measure a coincidence rate called

Bob sets RB so it sends the teleported state away from DB to measure a coincidence rate called

Page 26: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

(+)

(-)

How do we verify that teleportation was successful?

Bob sets RB so it sends the teleported state to DB to measure a coincidence rate called

Result: S = 0.853 ± 0.012

The classical limit on “S” (without using entanglement) is 0.75. Thus, these results break the classical limit by 8 standard deviations.

Bob sets RB so it sends the teleported state away from DB to measure a coincidence rate called

Page 27: Introduction to Quantum Teleportation By Dumb Scientist First created: May 15, 2007 Last modified: October 29, 2008 TexPoint fonts used in EMF. Read the

Conclusion Experiments have demonstrated

teleportation of polarization, atomic energy levels and squeezed states of light.

Can’t claim that a single photon has been teleported in its entirety because we’ve ignored the photon’s spatial states, frequency and k-vector.

Scaling up teleportation to handle macroscopic objects presents enormous challenges.

In the near term, quantum teleportation is useful for linking quantum computers and providing truly secure communication.