Superdense coding

(Redirected from Quantum dense coding)

In quantum information theory, superdense coding (also referred to as dense coding) is a quantum communication protocol to communicate a number of classical bits of information by only transmitting a smaller number of qubits, under the assumption of sender and receiver pre-sharing an entangled resource. In its simplest form, the protocol involves two parties, often referred to as Alice and Bob in this context, which share a pair of maximally entangled qubits, and allows Alice to transmit two bits (i.e., one of 00, 01, 10 or 11) to Bob by sending only one qubit.[1][2] This protocol was first proposed by Charles H. Bennett and Stephen Wiesner in 1970[3] (though not published by them until 1992) and experimentally actualized in 1996 by Klaus Mattle, Harald Weinfurter, Paul G. Kwiat and Anton Zeilinger using entangled photon pairs.[2] Superdense coding can be thought of as the opposite of quantum teleportation, in which one transfers one qubit from Alice to Bob by communicating two classical bits, as long as Alice and Bob have a pre-shared Bell pair.[2]

Schematic video demonstrating individual steps of superdense coding. A message consisting of two bits (in video these are (1, 0)) is sent from station A to station B using only a single particle. This particle is a member of an entangled pair created by source S. Station A at first applies a properly chosen operation to its particle and then sends it to station B, which measures both particles in the Bell basis. The measurement result retrieves the two bits sent by station A.

The transmission of two bits via a single qubit is made possible by the fact that Alice can choose among four quantum gate operations to perform on her share of the entangled state. Alice determines which operation to perform accordingly to the pair of bits she wants to transmit. She then sends Bob the qubit state evolved through the chosen gate. Said qubit thus encodes information about the two bits Alice used to select the operation, and this information can be retrieved by Bob thanks to pre-shared entanglement between them. After receiving Alice's qubit, operating on the pair and measuring both, Bob obtains two classical bits of information. It is worth stressing that if Alice and Bob do not pre-share entanglement, then the superdense protocol is impossible, as this would violate Holevo's theorem.

Superdense coding is the underlying principle of secure quantum secret coding. The necessity of having both qubits to decode the information being sent eliminates the risk of eavesdroppers intercepting messages.[4]

Overview

edit
 
When the sender and receiver share a Bell state, two classical bits can be packed into one qubit. In the diagram, lines carry qubits, while the doubled lines carry classic bits. The variables b1 and b2 are classic Boolean, and the zeroes at the left-hand side represent the pure quantum state  . See the section named "The protocol" below for more details regarding this picture.

Suppose Alice wants to send two classical bits of information (00, 01, 10, or 11) to Bob using qubits (instead of classical bits). To do this, an entangled state (e.g. a Bell state) is prepared using a Bell circuit or gate by Charlie, a third person. Charlie then sends one of these qubits (in the Bell state) to Alice and the other to Bob. Once Alice obtains her qubit in the entangled state, she applies a certain quantum gate to her qubit depending on which two-bit message (00, 01, 10 or 11) she wants to send to Bob. Her entangled qubit is then sent to Bob who, after applying the appropriate quantum gate and making a measurement, can retrieve the classical two-bit message. Observe that Alice does not need to communicate to Bob which gate to apply in order to obtain the correct classical bits from his projective measurement.

The protocol

edit

The protocol can be split into five different steps: preparation, sharing, encoding, sending, and decoding.

Preparation

edit

The protocol starts with the preparation of an entangled state, which is later shared between Alice and Bob. For example, the following Bell state

 

is prepared, where   denotes the tensor product. In common usage the tensor product symbol   may be omitted:

 .

Sharing

edit

After the preparation of the Bell state  , the qubit denoted by subscript A is sent to Alice and the qubit denoted by subscript B is sent to Bob. Alice and Bob may be in different locations, an unlimited distance from each other.

There may be an arbitrary period between the preparation and sharing of the entangled state   and the rest of the steps in the procedure.

Encoding

edit

By applying a quantum gate to her qubit locally, Alice can transform the entangled state   into any of the four Bell states (including, of course,  ). Note that this process cannot "break" the entanglement between the two qubits.

Let's now describe which operations Alice needs to perform on her entangled qubit, depending on which classical two-bit message she wants to send to Bob. We'll later see why these specific operations are performed. There are four cases, which correspond to the four possible two-bit strings that Alice may want to send.

1. If Alice wants to send the classical two-bit string 00 to Bob, then she applies the identity quantum gate,  , to her qubit, so that it remains unchanged. The resultant entangled state is then

 

In other words, the entangled state shared between Alice and Bob has not changed, i.e. it is still  . The notation   indicates that Alice wants to send the two-bit string 00.

2. If Alice wants to send the classical two-bit string 01 to Bob, then she applies the quantum NOT (or bit-flip) gate,  , to her qubit, so that the resultant entangled quantum state becomes

 

3. If Alice wants to send the classical two-bit string 10 to Bob, then she applies the quantum phase-flip gate   to her qubit, so the resultant entangled state becomes

 

4. If, instead, Alice wants to send the classical two-bit string 11 to Bob, then she applies the quantum gate   to her qubit, so that the resultant entangled state becomes

 

The matrices  ,  , and   are known as Pauli matrices.

Sending

edit

After having performed one of the operations described above, Alice can send her entangled qubit to Bob using a quantum network through some conventional physical medium.

Decoding

edit

In order for Bob to find out which classical bits Alice sent he will perform the CNOT unitary operation, with A as control qubit and B as target qubit. Then, he will perform   unitary operation on the entangled qubit A. In other words, the Hadamard quantum gate H is only applied to A (see the figure above).

  • If the resultant entangled state was   then after the application of the above unitary operations the entangled state will become  
  • If the resultant entangled state was   then after the application of the above unitary operations the entangled state will become  
  • If the resultant entangled state was   then after the application of the above unitary operations the entangled state will become  
  • If the resultant entangled state was   then after the application of the above unitary operations the entangled state will become  

These operations performed by Bob can be seen as a measurement which projects the entangled state onto one of the four two-qubit basis vectors   or   (as you can see from the outcomes and the example below).

Example

edit

For example, if the resultant entangled state (after the operations performed by Alice) was  , then a CNOT with A as control bit and B as target bit will change   to become  . Now, the Hadamard gate is applied only to A, to obtain

 

For simplicity, subscripts may be removed:

 

Now, Bob has the basis state  , so he knows that Alice wanted to send the two-bit string 01.

Security

edit

Superdense coding is a form of secure quantum communication.[4] If an eavesdropper, commonly called Eve, intercepts Alice's qubit en route to Bob, all that is obtained by Eve is part of an entangled state. Without access to Bob's qubit, Eve is unable to get any information from Alice's qubit. A third party is unable to eavesdrop on information being communicated through superdense coding and an attempt to measure either qubit would collapse the state of that qubit and alert Bob and Alice.

General dense coding scheme

edit

General dense coding schemes can be formulated in the language used to describe quantum channels. Alice and Bob share a maximally entangled state ω. Let the subsystems initially possessed by Alice and Bob be labeled 1 and 2, respectively. To transmit the message x, Alice applies an appropriate channel

 

on subsystem 1. On the combined system, this is effected by

 

where I denotes the identity map on subsystem 2. Alice then sends her subsystem to Bob, who performs a measurement on the combined system to recover the message. Let Bob's measurement be modelled by a POVM  , with   positive semidefinite operators such that  . The probability that Bob's measuring apparatus registers the message   is thus   Therefore, to achieve the desired transmission, we require that   where   is the Kronecker delta.

Experimental

edit

The protocol of superdense coding has been actualized in several experiments using different systems to varying levels of channel capacity and fidelities. In 2004, trapped beryllium-9 ions were used in a maximally entangled state to achieve a channel capacity of 1.16 with a fidelity of 0.85.[5] In 2017, a channel capacity of 1.665 was achieved with a fidelity of 0.87 through optical fibers.[6] High-dimensional ququarts (states formed in photon pairs by non-degenerate spontaneous parametric down-conversion) were used to reach a channel capacity of 2.09 (with a limit of 2.32) with a fidelity of 0.98.[7] Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) has also been used to share among three parties.[8]

References

edit
  1. ^ Bennett, C.; Wiesner, S. (1992). "Communication via one- and two-particle operators on Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen states". Physical Review Letters. 69 (20): 2881–2884. Bibcode:1992PhRvL..69.2881B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.69.2881. PMID 10046665.
  2. ^ a b c Nielsen, Michael A.; Chuang, Isaac L. (9 December 2010). "2.3 Application: superdense coding". Quantum Computation and Quantum Information: 10th Anniversary Edition. Cambridge University Press. p. 97. ISBN 978-1-139-49548-6.
  3. ^ Stephen Wiesner. Memorial blog post by Or Sattath, with scan of Bennett's handwritten notes from 1970. See also Stephen Wiesner (1942–2021) by Scott Aaronson, which also discusses this topic.
  4. ^ a b Wang, C., Deng, F.-G., Li, Y.-S., Liu, X.-S., & Long, G. L. (2005). Quantum secure direct communication with high-dimension quantum superdense coding. Physical Review A, 71(4).
  5. ^ Schaetz, T., Barrett, M. D., Leibfried, D., Chiaverini, J., Britton, J., Itano, W. M., … Wineland, D. J. (2004). Quantum Dense Coding with Atomic Qubits. Physical Review Letters, 93(4).
  6. ^ Williams, B. P., Sadlier, R. J., & Humble, T. S. (2017). Superdense Coding over Optical Fiber Links with Complete Bell-State Measurements. Physical Review Letters, 118(5).
  7. ^ Hu, X.-M., Guo, Y., Liu, B.-H., Huang, Y.-F., Li, C.-F., & Guo, G.-C. (2018). Beating the channel capacity limit for superdense coding with entangled ququarts. Science Advances, 4(7), eaat9304.
  8. ^ Wei, D., Yang, X., Luo, J., Sun, X., Zeng, X., & Liu, M. (2004). NMR experimental implementation of three-parties quantum superdense coding. Chinese Science Bulletin, 49(5), 423–426.
edit