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Chapter devoted to the basic quantum properties of entanglement and separability. Introduces the Schmidt decomposition for pure states and the positive partial transpose criterion for mixed states as entanglement witnesses. Introduces the famous Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen paradox and its implementation in terms of qubits, then the Bell inequality, quickly reviewing the experimental demonstrations that quantum mechanics violates this inequality. Gives examples of the use of entanglement in a quantum algorithm to accelerate an information task, namely a database search (Grover algorithm) and the possibility of teleportation of a quantum state.
This chapter presents the theoretical framework that allows us to describe evolutions in the general case using Kraus operators as the main tool. It considers in detail the phenomenon of decoherence and gives examples of such maps. It shows that any evolution can be considered as unitary by going in a larger Hilbert space. The Lindblad equation for the evolution of the density matrix appears as a particular case of evolution in the short memory or Markov approximation. Up-jumps and down-jumps are also described within this framework using cavity damping, spontaneous emission, and the shelving technique as examples.
Appendix J: mechanical effects of light on matter. The appendix first derives the two forces exerted by a light beam on an atom: the radiation pressure force and the dipole force. Appropriate combinations of beams lead to a friction force that slows the atoms (Doppler cooling), and to a trapping force in the so-called magneto-optics trap (MOT). One then considers the forces exerted on ions, leading to trapping in a suitable geometry of electrodes and fields. Two configurations are used, named Paul and Penning traps. In addition, it is possible to cool the ions to their ground motional state using sideband cooling. It is also possible to trap and cool macroscopic nano-objects, such as microdiscs, membranes, toroids, etc. in a resonant optical cavity.
Appendix H: treats the interaction between a light beam and a linear optical medium. This first part considers the propagation of a light beam in a sample of two-level atoms using a semiclassical approach, calculates the index of refraction of the medium and its gain when there is population inversion, and losses when the ground state is populated. It then treats in a full quantum way linear attenuation or amplification, for which the "3dB penalty" on the signal-to-noise ratio is derived from basic quantum principles. Finally, it considers the input–output relation for the two input modes of a linear beamplitter, an important example of a symplectic map.
Appendix I: propagation of a light beam in a nonlinear parametric medium, inducing a medium-assisted energy transfer between the input beam and the generation of signal and idler beams, hence the name three-wave mixing given to this phenomenon, which is first treated classically, then in a fully quantum way. One finds that, as in the case of fluorescence by spontaneous emission, the phenomenon of spontaneous parametric down conversion (or parametric fluorescence) requires a full quantum treatment, whereas parametric gain can be calculated semiclassically. It gives rise to entangled signal and idler photons as well as twin beams when one inserts the nonlinear medium in a resonant optical cavity (optical parametric oscillator) and to squeezing when the signal and idler modes are identical.
Appendix F: classical, then quantum electromagnetic field. Complex field observable and single-photon field amplitude. Vacuum and Fock states. Single photon state and its polarization properties, quadrature operators for a single-mode field, and its description in phase–space. Heisenberg inequality for rotated quadratures. Vacuum and coherent states have unavoidable phase-independent quantum fluctuations (standard quantum noise). Squeezed states have reduced fluctuations in one of the quadratures. Finally, the appendix considers the measurement of photon coincidence and their characterizatioin in terms of the intensity correlation function g2, and, in particular, the photon bunching effect in thermal states and antibunching effect in single and twin photon states.
Appendix D: two-level quantum mechanical systems, or qubits. Description in terms of Bloch vector. Poincaré sphere. Expression of purity. Projection noise in an energy measurement. Description of a set of N coherently driven qubits by a collective Bloch vector.
Experimental chapter that presents examples of quantum processes concerning single quantum systems, i.e. sequences comprising a state preparation part, an evolution or propagation part due to the interaction with the outer world, and a detection part. The whole sequence is repeated and its successive results stored. The examples concern quantum control of trapped ions and microwave photonsinteracting in a nondestructive way with Rydberg state cavities. It also presents "boson sampling" of photons placed in a multimode linear interferometer, a system likely to exhibit "quantum advantage," atoms trapped in an optical lattice, a promising platform for quantum simulation of complex systems, generation of "Schrödinger cats" in superconducting circuits.
Experimental chapter devoted to quantum observables endowed with continuously varying quantum fluctuations, such as position and momentum, quadrature operators, or phase and amplitude of electromagnetic fields . It shows that one can manipulate this quantum noise by generating squeezed states of light, always within the limits imposed by the Heisenberg inequality, and create strong correlations between these observables to conditionally generate quantum states having intensity quantum fluctuations below the "shot noise" limit imposed by the existence of vacuum fluctuations. Describes an experiment dealing with macroscopic mechanical oscillators displaying motional squeezing below the zero point fluctuations, and another one dealing with macroscopic superconducting exhibiting a whole spectrum of strongly nonclassical states, generated by using the strong anharmonicity of the Josephson potential.
Experimental chapter presenting different implementations of bipartite systems, made of two subsystems having interacted in the past and developing strong correlations: optical parametric interaction responsible for the generation of highly correlated twin photons and light beams, cascaded spontaneous emission, collectively oscillating trapped ions, macroscopic atomic samples, cavity-mediated correlated SQUIDtransmons.
This chapter presents the theoretical framework, based on Gleason’s theorem, allowing to describegeneralized measurements, in addition to von Neumann measurements, in terms of POVMs, probability operators and post-measurement operators. It mentions the Naimark theorem according to which a generalized measurement is a von Neumann measurement if one describes it in a Hilbert space of higher dimension. Examples of generalized measurements are given: imperfect measurements, simultaneous measurements of noncommuting operators. It presents the Zurek model that accounts for the decoherence process occurring in a measurement and shows that the quantum measurement process, including state collapse, is not a physical evolution. Finally, it studies the case of successive measurements using Bayes statistics in which the state collapse appears as an updating of the information about a system, and the fundamental property of repeatability of quantum mechanics.
Appendix E: free, then harmonically bound, massive quantum particle. Lowering and rising operators, displacement operator, number states, coherent states, zero point fluctuations.
Appendix A: basic postulates of quantum mechanics, valid for isolated systems and perfect measurements, and direct implications, such as superposition principle and time reversibility.