Litcius/Paper detail

Eavesdropping on the Decohering Environment: Quantum Darwinism, Amplification, and the Origin of Objective Classical Reality

Akram Touil, Bin Yan, Davide Girolami, Sebastian Deffner, Wojciech H. Zurek

2022Physical Review Letters49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

"How much information about a system S can one extract from a fragment F of the environment E that decohered it?" is the central question of Quantum Darwinism. To date, most answers relied on the quantum mutual information of SF, or on the Holevo bound on the channel capacity of F to communicate the classical information encoded in S. These are reasonable upper bounds on what is really needed but much harder to calculate-the accessible information in the fragment F about S. We consider a model based on imperfect c-not gates where all the above can be computed, and discuss its implications for the emergence of objective classical reality. We find that all relevant quantities, such as the quantum mutual information as well as various bounds on the accessible information exhibit similar behavior. In the regime relevant for the emergence of objective classical reality this includes scaling independent of the quality of the imperfect c-not gates or the size of E, and even nearly independent of the initial state of S.

Topics & Concepts

QuantumComputer scienceMutual informationQuantum informationEavesdroppingImperfectQubitPerfect informationQuantum decoherenceStatistical physicsClassical capacityUpper and lower boundsPhysicsQuantum channelTheoretical computer scienceTheoretical physicsQuantum mechanicsMathematicsPhilosophyMathematical economicsArtificial intelligenceComputer securityLinguisticsMathematical analysisQuantum Information and CryptographyQuantum Mechanics and ApplicationsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
Eavesdropping on the Decohering Environment: Quantum Darwinism, Amplification, and the Origin of Objective Classical Reality | Litcius