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Photon number splitting attack

by Yee Wei Law - Sunday, 11 February 2024, 4:09 PM
 

References

[BLMS00] G. Brassard, N. Lütkenhaus, T. Mor, and B. C. Sanders, Limitations on practical quantum cryptography, Phys. Rev. Lett. 85 no. 6 (2000), 1330–1333. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.85.1330.
[L00] N. Lütkenhaus, Security against individual attacks for realistic quantum key distribution, Phys. Rev. A 61 no. 5 (2000), 052304. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA. 61.052304.

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Positive operator-valued measure (POVM)

by Yee Wei Law - Sunday, 24 December 2023, 11:35 AM
 

The positive operator-valued measure (POVM) is a mathematical formalism/tool representing a measurement operation [NC10, Sec. 2.2.6; WN17, Sec. 1.5.1] that satisfies Postulate 3.

Suppose a measurement described by measurement operators , where takes value from a finite set, is performed on a quantum system in the state , then the probability of outcome is given by

Suppose we define

then satisfies 1️⃣ the completeness relation and 2️⃣ is positive-semidefinite.

  • The general equality for some density matrix is known as the POVM version of the Born rule.
  • The operators are called the POVM elements associated with the measurement.
  • The complete set is known as a POVM.
Example 1 [NC10, p. 92]

Suppose Alice gives Bob a qubit prepared in one of two states:

Here is a measurement strategy for Bob to determine unequivocally whether he receives or . Define:

Clearly satisfy the completeness relation, and by checking the definition of positive semidefiniteness, we can verify to be positive operators, so form a POVM.

Let us now see how Bob can use to distinquish between and :

  • Since whereas , getting a measurement outcome associated with implies Bob must have received .
  • Since whereas , getting a measurement outcome associated with implies Bob must have received .
  • Receiving a measurement outcome associated with however precludes Bob from inferring anything about the identity of the state he receives.

Using , Bob never mistakes for and vice versa, but Bob sometimes cannot determine which state he receives.

Example 2 [WN17, Example 1.5.1]

Denote by an orthonormal basis.

Define (a projector), and , then for each ,

where is a matrix with the basis vectors as columns. The linear independence of the basis vectors implies is nonsingular, and

In other words, satisfies the completeness relation.

Given a quantum state , we should expect , and indeed

At this point, we can call a POVM.

When the POVM elements are projectors, such as in the preceding example, the POVM is called a projection-valued measure (PVM) [Hay17, p. 7].

Watch edX Lecture 1.6 “Generalized measurements” of Quantum Cryptography by CaltechDelftX QuCryptox.

References

[Hay17] M. Hayashi, Quantum Information Theory: Mathematical Foundation, second ed., Springer Berlin, Heidelberg, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-49725-8.
[KLM07] P. Kaye, R. Laflamme, and M. Mosca, An Introduction to Quantum Computing, Oxford University Press, 2007. Available at https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/unisa/reader.action?docID=415080.
[NC10] M. A. Nielsen and I. L. Chuang, Quantum computation and quantum information, 10th anniversary ed., Cambridge University Press, 2010. Available at http://mmrc.amss.cas.cn/tlb/201702/W020170224608149940643.pdf.
[Qis21] Qiskit, The density matrix and mixed states, Qiskit textbook, June 2021. Available at https://learn.qiskit.org/course/quantum-hardware/density-matrix.
[WN17] S. Wehner and N. Ng, Lecture Notes: edX Quantum Cryptography, CaltechDelftX: QuCryptox, 2017. Available at https://courses.edx.org/courses/course-v1:CaltechDelftX+QuCryptox+3T2018/pdfbook/0/.

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Positive semidefiniteness and positive definiteness

by Yee Wei Law - Monday, 17 April 2023, 3:51 PM
 

For Hermitian matrix , the following statements are equivalent, and any one can serve as the definition of the positive definiteness of [Mey00, Sec. 7.6; Woe16, Sec. 7.4]:

  • , for all . Note is called a quadratic form.

    In Dirac notation, , for all . Note .

  • The eigenvalues of are all positive.
  • can be put in the form or , where is a nonsingular matrix.

Similarly, the following statements are equivalent, and any one can serve as the definition of the positive semidefiniteness of :

  • , for all .

    In Dirac notation, , for all .

  • The eigenvalues of are all nonnegative.

References

[Woe16] H. Woerdeman, Advanced Linear Algebra, CRC Press, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1201/b18994.
[Mey00] C. Meyer, Matrix Analysis and Applied Linear Algebra, SIAM, 2000. Available at http://portal.igpublish.com.eu1.proxy.openathens.net/iglibrary/obj/SIAMB0000114.

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Projective measurement

by Yee Wei Law - Sunday, 4 June 2023, 12:31 PM
 

The discussion here follows from the discussion of the positive operator-valued measure (POVM).

The POVM cannot be used to determine the post-measurement state because the post-measurement state may not be pure [WN17, p. 13]. Instead, a Kraus operator representation of the POVM, known as projective measurement, is necessary to specify the post-measurement state.

Projective measurements are repeatable, and the outcome observed as a result of projective measurement is deterministic [MM12, Sec. 2.7], as explained below.

This repeatability implies many important measurements in quantum mechanics are not projective measurements; for instance, if we use a silvered screen to measure the position of a photon, we destroy the photon in the process, and obviously this measurement cannot be repeated.

Projective measurements are often discussed in terms of an observable, which is defined as a Hermitian operator acting on the state space of a system.

Every observable has a spectral decomposition [Mey00, p. 517]:

where are the eigenvalues of , and are so-called spectral/orthogonal projectors onto the null space of . More precisely, 1️⃣ are Hermitian and idempotent, 2️⃣ , and 3️⃣ are mutually orthogonal.

Clearly, are valid POVM elements.

A (non-unique) Kraus operator representation or Kraus decomposition of is defined as [WN17, Definition 1.5.2]:

where .

  • If we define , then .
  • If we define , where is any unitary matrix, then .
  • Thus, there is no unique Kraus representation/decomposition.

With Kraus operators, we can now define projective measurement:

Definition 1: Projective measurement [WN17, Definition 1.5.4; MM12, p. 153]

A projective measurement is given by a set of orthogonal projectors  such that . By default, the Kraus operator is chosen to be .

The probability of observing measurement outcome given initial state is

The post-measurement state is

For pure state , the post-measurement state is

Most authors equate the term “von Neumann measurement” to “projective measurement”, but some consider the former to be a special case of the latter [KLM07, p.50].

Since the default Kraus operators are the same as the orthogonal projectors, most authors skip discussion of Kraus operators altogether 🤷‍♂️.

Measuring the observable is equivalent to performing a projective measurement with respect to the decomposition , where the measurement outcome corresponds to eigenvalue .

Example 1 [KLM07, Example 3.4.1]

Consider the Pauli observable , i.e., the Pauli-Z operator/matrix:

which does not change an input of , but flips to (which is equivalent to with a phase change).

The Pauli-Z operator acts as a NOT operator in the Hadamard basis.

has eigenpairs and , where the eigenvectors and are also called eigenstates [MM12, p. 338].

Thus, has spectral decomposition:

with orthogonal projectors

Interpreting the above, a projective measurement of is a measurement in the standard basis with eigenvalue corresponding to final state and eigenvalue corresponding to final state .

Example 2 [WN17, Example 1.5.3]

Given a two-qubit state , suppose we want to measure the parity of the two qubits in the standard basis.

One method is to measure in the (-dimensional) standard basis, obtain two classical bits, and take their parity.

In this case, the probability of obtaining outcome “even” is

and the post-measurement state is

Another method is to measure the parity using projective measurement which directly projects onto the relevant subspaces, without measuring the qubits individually. Define projectors:

which we can quickly verify to be orthogonal and conformant with the completeness relation:

In this case, the probability of getting outcome “even” is

which is the same as before; and the post-measurement state is

The preceding two methods produce different outcomes on the EPR state , or in density-matrix representation,

By measurement in the standard basis, the probability of getting outcome “even” is

while the post-measurement state is

By projective measurement, is the same as before, but the post-measurement state is different:

Thus, projective measurement with does not change the EPR state.

This is one of the main advantages of using projective measurement as opposed to basis measurement: the former enables simple computation (e.g., parity) on multi-qubit states without fully “destroying” the state, as basis measurement does.

In Example 2, the observation that the projective measurement preserves the quantum state is not a coincidence. In fact, building on Definition 1, applying measurement to , i.e., applying to twice gives us [MM12, p. 153]:

where .

References

[KLM07] P. Kaye, R. Laflamme, and M. Mosca, An Introduction to Quantum Computing, Oxford University Press, 2007. Available at https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/unisa/reader.action?docID=415080.
[MM12] D. C. Marinescu and G. M. Marinescu, Classical and Quantum Information, Elsevier, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1016/C2009-0-64195-7.
[Mey00] C. Meyer, Matrix Analysis and Applied Linear Algebra, SIAM, 2000. Available at http://portal.igpublish.com.eu1.proxy.openathens.net/iglibrary/obj/SIAMB0000114.
[NC10] M. A. Nielsen and I. L. Chuang, Quantum computation and quantum information, 10th anniversary ed., Cambridge University Press, 2010. Available at http://mmrc.amss.cas.cn/tlb/201702/W020170224608149940643.pdf.
[WN17] S. Wehner and N. Ng, Lecture Notes: edX Quantum Cryptography, CaltechDelftX: QuCryptox, 2017. Available at https://courses.edx.org/courses/course-v1:CaltechDelftX+QuCryptox+3T2018/pdfbook/0/.

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Projector

by Yee Wei Law - Sunday, 24 December 2023, 11:33 AM
 

A matrix is a projector if it is 1️⃣ Hermitian and 2️⃣ idempotent [Ber18, Definition 4.1.1].

References

[Ber18] D. S. Bernstein, Scalar, Vector, and Matrix Mathematics: Theory, Facts, and Formulas - Revised and Expanded Edition, Princeton University Press, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1515/9781400888252.

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Pure state, mixed state, density operator/matrix

by Yee Wei Law - Sunday, 11 February 2024, 5:51 PM
 

As defined in Practical 1 of COMP 5074, a qubit is a quantum state with two possible outcomes. Mathematically, a qubit is a two-dimensional Hilbert space.

A pure state is the quantum state of a qubit that we can precisely define at any point in time [Qis21, Sec. 1].

  • For example, a qubit, say , that started out as becomes when it passes through a Hadamard gate.
  • When we measure in the computational basis (Z-basis), we get at a probability of 0.5, or at the same probability.
  • Regardless of our measurement, in the ideal condition, we can say with absolute certainty that has quantum state , and is an example of a pure state.

In non-ideal conditions, a qubit can assume a certain quantum state at a certain probability, and other quantum states at other probabilities, regardless of measurements.

  • For example, consider the two-qubit entangled state in Fig. 1:

    where the subscripts and label the qubits associated with registers and respectively.

    Fig. 1: A two-qubit entangled state [Qis21, Sec. 2].
  • Since the qubits of and are entangled, measuring a in causes to be measured in . Similarly, measuring a in causes to be measured in .
  • Equivalently, the qubit of , namely , assumes values and at equal probability.
  • However, this is NOT to say is a superposition of and , i.e., we CANNOT express as .
  • is a mixture or ensemble of the states and [KLM07, Sec. 3.5].
  • is an example of a mixed state, i.e., a statistical ensemble of quantum states [Qis21, Sec. 2].

A direct but rather clunky representation of a mixed state is the set of pairs:

where each pair means the pure state appears at probability , for . Note .

A more compact and useful representation of a mixed state can be obtained from the type of Hilbert-space operators called density operators [KLM07, Sec. 3.5.1].

  • The matrix representation of a density operator is a density matrix.
  • The density matrix representing the pure state is defined as the outer product

  • The density matrix representing the mixed state is defined as the weighted sum of outer products:

    Note do not need to be basis states.

    Example 1

    Revisiting the example in Fig. 1, the density matrix of is thus

  • It is important to know the effect of measuring a mixed state.

    Suppose the pure state , where , is measured in the computational (Z) basis, then the probability of getting as the measurement outcome is [WN17, Sec. 1.2.1]:

    Similarly, the probability of getting as the measurement outcome is .

    Now suppose we are measuring the mixed state . By the law of total probability, the probability of getting is now 

    Similarly, the probability of getting is .

    Thus in general, the probability of measuring mixed state and getting basis vector is

    Example 2

    Continuing from Example 1, let us find out the probability of getting when is measured in the Hadamard (X) basis.

    The probability of getting is

    Similarly, the probability of getting is .

    In case there is any confusion that mixed state is equivalent to , consider what happens when is measured in the X basis: the measurement outcome is simply at a probability of 1.

    Example 3
    [Leo10, Sec. 1.2]
  • A quick way to test whether a density matrix represents a pure state or a mixed state is to use the trace operator [Gra21, p. 11; NC10, Theorem 2.5]:

    represents a pure state if .

    represents a mixed state if .

    is positive-semidefinite (i.e., is a positive operator) and for any density matrix .

    A useful property of is available through the observation that since is a scalar,

    for matrix and ket . Applying the cyclic property of , we get , and consequently [WN17, Exercise 1.2.3]:

    (1)

If the explanation above is hard to grasp, see if edX Lecture 1.2 “The density matrix” of Quantum Cryptography by CaltechDelftX QuCryptox helps.

When applied with unitary operator , state evolves into . Accordingly, the density matrix of the mixed state evolves into

Our adventure with the trace operator continues because an important application of the trace operator is determining the probability of getting result when applying measurement operator to mixed state .

By definition, the probability of getting result given initial state is [NC10, p. 99]:

The last equality is due to Eq. (1). By the law of total probability,

Omitting the derivation in [NC10, pp. 99-100], the density matrix of the system after making measurement and obtaining result is:

By the law of total probability,

implying

which is called the completeness equation. ⚠ Note is unitary if and only if has one value.

Postulates of quantum mechanics

Using the language of the density operator, we can phrase the fundamental postulates of quantum mechanics as [NC10, pp. 98-102; Gra21, p. 11-12]:

Postulate 1: Associated with any isolated physical system is a complex-valued Hilbert space known as the state space of the system. The system is completely described by its density operator, which is a positive operator with trace one, acting on the state space of the system. If a quantum system is in the state (in density-matrix, not ket notation) with probability , then the density operator for the system is .

Postulate 2: The evolution of a closed quantum system is described by a unitary transformation. That is, the state of the system at time is related to the state of the system at time by a unitary operator , which depends only on the times and : .

Postulate 3 (aka Measurement Postulate): Quantum measurements are described by a collection of measurement operators. These are operators acting on the state space of the system being measured. The index refers to the measurement outcomes that may occur in the experiment. If the state of the quantum system is immediately before the measurement then the probability that result occurs is given by

and the state of the system after the measurement is

The measurement operators satisfy the completeness equation:

Postulate 4: The state space of a composite physical system is the tensor product of the state spaces of the component physical systems. Moreover, if we have systems numbered 1 through , and system number is prepared in the state , then the joint state of the total system is .

Postulate 3 defines general/generalised measurement [NC10, Box 2.5], which consists of 1️⃣ a rule describing the probabilities of different measurement outcomes, and 2️⃣ a rule describing the post-measurement state.

  • For applications where measurement is made once at the conclusion of some experiment, the main items of interest are the probabilities rather than the post-measurement state. For these applications, the mathematical tool of positive operator-valued measure (POVM) is applicable.
  • To determine the post-measurement state but in a way that the measurement is repeatable and the outcome is deterministic, we use projective measurement.

References

[Gra21] F. Grasselli, Quantum Cryptography: From Key Distribution to Conference Key Agreement, Quantum Science and Technology, Springer Cham, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-64360-7.
[KLM07] P. Kaye, R. Laflamme, and M. Mosca, An Introduction to Quantum Computing, Oxford University Press, 2007. Available at https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/unisa/reader.action?docID=415080.
[Leo10] U. Leonhardt, Essential Quantum Optics: From Quantum Measurements to Black Holes, Cambridge University Press, 2010. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511806117.
[NC10] M. A. Nielsen and I. L. Chuang, Quantum computation and quantum information, 10th anniversary ed., Cambridge University Press, 2010. Available at http://mmrc.amss.cas.cn/tlb/201702/W020170224608149940643.pdf.
[Qis21] Qiskit, The density matrix and mixed states, Qiskit textbook, June 2021. Available at https://learn.qiskit.org/course/quantum-hardware/density-matrix.
[WN17] S. Wehner and N. Ng, Lecture Notes: edX Quantum Cryptography, CaltechDelftX: QuCryptox, 2017. Available at https://courses.edx.org/courses/course-v1:CaltechDelftX+QuCryptox+3T2018/pdfbook/0/.