High-dimensional quantum information processing with linear optics

Quantum information processing (QIP) is an interdisciplinary field concerned with the development of computers and information processing systems that utilize quantum mechanical properties of nature to carry out their function. QIP systems have become vastly more practical since the turn of the cent...

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Main Author: Fitzpatrick, Casey Alan
Language:en_US
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/23564
id ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-23564
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-235642019-03-23T03:23:15Z High-dimensional quantum information processing with linear optics Fitzpatrick, Casey Alan Quantum physics Optics Photonics Quantum computing Quantum information processing Quantum optics Quantum information processing (QIP) is an interdisciplinary field concerned with the development of computers and information processing systems that utilize quantum mechanical properties of nature to carry out their function. QIP systems have become vastly more practical since the turn of the century. Today, QIP applications span imaging, cryptographic security, computation, and simulation (quantum systems that mimic other quantum systems). Many important strategies improve quantum versions of classical information system hardware, such as single photon detectors and quantum repeaters. Another more abstract strategy engineers high-dimensional quantum state spaces, so that each successful event carries more information than traditional two-level systems allow. Photonic states in particular bring the added advantages of weak environmental coupling and data transmission near the speed of light, allowing for simpler control and lower system design complexity. In this dissertation, numerous novel, scalable designs for practical high-dimensional linear-optical QIP systems are presented. First, a correlated photon imaging scheme using orbital angular momentum (OAM) states to detect rotational symmetries in objects using measurements, as well as building images out of those interactions is reported. Then, a statistical detection method using chains of OAM superpositions distributed according to the Fibonacci sequence is established and expanded upon. It is shown that the approach gives rise to schemes for sorting, detecting, and generating the recursively defined high-dimensional states on which some quantum cryptographic protocols depend. Finally, an ongoing study based on a generalization of the standard optical multiport for applications in quantum computation and simulation is reported upon. The architecture allows photons to reverse momentum inside the device. This in turn enables realistic implementation of controllable linear-optical scattering vertices for carrying out quantum walks on arbitrary graph structures, a powerful tool for any quantum computer. It is shown that the novel architecture provides new, efficient capabilities for the optical quantum simulation of Hamiltonians and topologically protected states. Further, these simulations use exponentially fewer resources than feedforward techniques, scale linearly to higher-dimensional systems, and use only linear optics, thus offering a concrete experimentally achievable implementation of graphical models of discrete-time quantum systems. 2017-08-17T18:52:45Z 2017-08-17T18:52:45Z 2017 2017-07-10T01:14:29Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/23564 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Quantum physics
Optics
Photonics
Quantum computing
Quantum information processing
Quantum optics
spellingShingle Quantum physics
Optics
Photonics
Quantum computing
Quantum information processing
Quantum optics
Fitzpatrick, Casey Alan
High-dimensional quantum information processing with linear optics
description Quantum information processing (QIP) is an interdisciplinary field concerned with the development of computers and information processing systems that utilize quantum mechanical properties of nature to carry out their function. QIP systems have become vastly more practical since the turn of the century. Today, QIP applications span imaging, cryptographic security, computation, and simulation (quantum systems that mimic other quantum systems). Many important strategies improve quantum versions of classical information system hardware, such as single photon detectors and quantum repeaters. Another more abstract strategy engineers high-dimensional quantum state spaces, so that each successful event carries more information than traditional two-level systems allow. Photonic states in particular bring the added advantages of weak environmental coupling and data transmission near the speed of light, allowing for simpler control and lower system design complexity. In this dissertation, numerous novel, scalable designs for practical high-dimensional linear-optical QIP systems are presented. First, a correlated photon imaging scheme using orbital angular momentum (OAM) states to detect rotational symmetries in objects using measurements, as well as building images out of those interactions is reported. Then, a statistical detection method using chains of OAM superpositions distributed according to the Fibonacci sequence is established and expanded upon. It is shown that the approach gives rise to schemes for sorting, detecting, and generating the recursively defined high-dimensional states on which some quantum cryptographic protocols depend. Finally, an ongoing study based on a generalization of the standard optical multiport for applications in quantum computation and simulation is reported upon. The architecture allows photons to reverse momentum inside the device. This in turn enables realistic implementation of controllable linear-optical scattering vertices for carrying out quantum walks on arbitrary graph structures, a powerful tool for any quantum computer. It is shown that the novel architecture provides new, efficient capabilities for the optical quantum simulation of Hamiltonians and topologically protected states. Further, these simulations use exponentially fewer resources than feedforward techniques, scale linearly to higher-dimensional systems, and use only linear optics, thus offering a concrete experimentally achievable implementation of graphical models of discrete-time quantum systems.
author Fitzpatrick, Casey Alan
author_facet Fitzpatrick, Casey Alan
author_sort Fitzpatrick, Casey Alan
title High-dimensional quantum information processing with linear optics
title_short High-dimensional quantum information processing with linear optics
title_full High-dimensional quantum information processing with linear optics
title_fullStr High-dimensional quantum information processing with linear optics
title_full_unstemmed High-dimensional quantum information processing with linear optics
title_sort high-dimensional quantum information processing with linear optics
publishDate 2017
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/23564
work_keys_str_mv AT fitzpatrickcaseyalan highdimensionalquantuminformationprocessingwithlinearoptics
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