How to prove teleportation does not violate non-cloning theorem?What is quantum gate teleportation?Using a...
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How to prove teleportation does not violate non-cloning theorem?
What is quantum gate teleportation?Using a fractional number of classical bits within quantum teleportationNo-cloning theorem and distinguishing between two non-orthogonal quantum statesWhen you act on a multi-qubit system with a 2-qubit gate, what happens to the third qubit?Applying CNOT with local operations and two EPR pairsQuantum teleportation: second classical bit for removing entanglement?BB84 attack with entangled qubits exampleControlling high-dimensional Hilbert spaces with a single qubitWhat does teleportation have to do w/ XOR linked lists?Construction of optimal ensemble to show quantum steerability
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For a given teleportation process as depicted in the figure, how one can say that teleporting the qubit state $|qrangle$ has not cloned at the end of Bob's measurement?
algorithm entanglement teleportation no-cloning-theorem
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For a given teleportation process as depicted in the figure, how one can say that teleporting the qubit state $|qrangle$ has not cloned at the end of Bob's measurement?
algorithm entanglement teleportation no-cloning-theorem
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For a given teleportation process as depicted in the figure, how one can say that teleporting the qubit state $|qrangle$ has not cloned at the end of Bob's measurement?
algorithm entanglement teleportation no-cloning-theorem
New contributor
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For a given teleportation process as depicted in the figure, how one can say that teleporting the qubit state $|qrangle$ has not cloned at the end of Bob's measurement?
algorithm entanglement teleportation no-cloning-theorem
algorithm entanglement teleportation no-cloning-theorem
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edited 1 hour ago
Blue♦
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6,29541355
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asked 2 hours ago
Student404MusStudent404Mus
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There's nothing to prove as such here. It is evident from the teleportation protocol itself.
Yes, at the conclusion of the teleportation protocol, Bob's qubit certainly will take on the same state as Alice's qubit's initial state i.e. $|qrangle$. However, Alice's qubit will now exist as an inseparable part of an entangled Bell state. You haven't really been able to create a "copy" of Alice's qubit, in the sense that Alice's qubit's initial state is "destroyed" in the process and is no longer $|qrangle$.
In (crude) analogical terms, in the quantum teleportation protocol you "cut and paste" the state $|qrangle$ rather than "copying and pasting". So there's no violation of the No cloning theorem!
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$begingroup$
I.e., if we have the entire initial state is written as follows
$| q rangle otimes | beta_{00} rangle =(alpha | 0rangle+beta | 1 rangle ) otimes frac{1}{sqrt{2}}( |00rangle+| 11 rangle )= frac{1}{sqrt{2}}(alpha | 000rangle+alpha | 011 rangle+beta | 100 rangle+beta | 111 rangle )$ ,
then, after the measurement, we obtain the state
$|psi rangle equiv{ |00rangle frac{alpha | 0 rangle+beta | 1rangle}{2}+| 01 rangle frac{alpha | 1 rangle+beta | 0rangle}{2}+| 10 rangle frac{alpha | 0 rangle-beta | 1rangle}{2}+| 11 rangle frac{alpha | 1 rangle-beta | 0rangle}{2} }$ ,
hence we can no longer write
$| q rangle otimes | something rangle$ ,
namely, we can't factorize $| q rangle$ outside the result which implies that it didn't produce again.
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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$begingroup$
There's nothing to prove as such here. It is evident from the teleportation protocol itself.
Yes, at the conclusion of the teleportation protocol, Bob's qubit certainly will take on the same state as Alice's qubit's initial state i.e. $|qrangle$. However, Alice's qubit will now exist as an inseparable part of an entangled Bell state. You haven't really been able to create a "copy" of Alice's qubit, in the sense that Alice's qubit's initial state is "destroyed" in the process and is no longer $|qrangle$.
In (crude) analogical terms, in the quantum teleportation protocol you "cut and paste" the state $|qrangle$ rather than "copying and pasting". So there's no violation of the No cloning theorem!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There's nothing to prove as such here. It is evident from the teleportation protocol itself.
Yes, at the conclusion of the teleportation protocol, Bob's qubit certainly will take on the same state as Alice's qubit's initial state i.e. $|qrangle$. However, Alice's qubit will now exist as an inseparable part of an entangled Bell state. You haven't really been able to create a "copy" of Alice's qubit, in the sense that Alice's qubit's initial state is "destroyed" in the process and is no longer $|qrangle$.
In (crude) analogical terms, in the quantum teleportation protocol you "cut and paste" the state $|qrangle$ rather than "copying and pasting". So there's no violation of the No cloning theorem!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There's nothing to prove as such here. It is evident from the teleportation protocol itself.
Yes, at the conclusion of the teleportation protocol, Bob's qubit certainly will take on the same state as Alice's qubit's initial state i.e. $|qrangle$. However, Alice's qubit will now exist as an inseparable part of an entangled Bell state. You haven't really been able to create a "copy" of Alice's qubit, in the sense that Alice's qubit's initial state is "destroyed" in the process and is no longer $|qrangle$.
In (crude) analogical terms, in the quantum teleportation protocol you "cut and paste" the state $|qrangle$ rather than "copying and pasting". So there's no violation of the No cloning theorem!
$endgroup$
There's nothing to prove as such here. It is evident from the teleportation protocol itself.
Yes, at the conclusion of the teleportation protocol, Bob's qubit certainly will take on the same state as Alice's qubit's initial state i.e. $|qrangle$. However, Alice's qubit will now exist as an inseparable part of an entangled Bell state. You haven't really been able to create a "copy" of Alice's qubit, in the sense that Alice's qubit's initial state is "destroyed" in the process and is no longer $|qrangle$.
In (crude) analogical terms, in the quantum teleportation protocol you "cut and paste" the state $|qrangle$ rather than "copying and pasting". So there's no violation of the No cloning theorem!
edited 44 mins ago
answered 1 hour ago
Blue♦Blue
6,29541355
6,29541355
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I.e., if we have the entire initial state is written as follows
$| q rangle otimes | beta_{00} rangle =(alpha | 0rangle+beta | 1 rangle ) otimes frac{1}{sqrt{2}}( |00rangle+| 11 rangle )= frac{1}{sqrt{2}}(alpha | 000rangle+alpha | 011 rangle+beta | 100 rangle+beta | 111 rangle )$ ,
then, after the measurement, we obtain the state
$|psi rangle equiv{ |00rangle frac{alpha | 0 rangle+beta | 1rangle}{2}+| 01 rangle frac{alpha | 1 rangle+beta | 0rangle}{2}+| 10 rangle frac{alpha | 0 rangle-beta | 1rangle}{2}+| 11 rangle frac{alpha | 1 rangle-beta | 0rangle}{2} }$ ,
hence we can no longer write
$| q rangle otimes | something rangle$ ,
namely, we can't factorize $| q rangle$ outside the result which implies that it didn't produce again.
New contributor
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I.e., if we have the entire initial state is written as follows
$| q rangle otimes | beta_{00} rangle =(alpha | 0rangle+beta | 1 rangle ) otimes frac{1}{sqrt{2}}( |00rangle+| 11 rangle )= frac{1}{sqrt{2}}(alpha | 000rangle+alpha | 011 rangle+beta | 100 rangle+beta | 111 rangle )$ ,
then, after the measurement, we obtain the state
$|psi rangle equiv{ |00rangle frac{alpha | 0 rangle+beta | 1rangle}{2}+| 01 rangle frac{alpha | 1 rangle+beta | 0rangle}{2}+| 10 rangle frac{alpha | 0 rangle-beta | 1rangle}{2}+| 11 rangle frac{alpha | 1 rangle-beta | 0rangle}{2} }$ ,
hence we can no longer write
$| q rangle otimes | something rangle$ ,
namely, we can't factorize $| q rangle$ outside the result which implies that it didn't produce again.
New contributor
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I.e., if we have the entire initial state is written as follows
$| q rangle otimes | beta_{00} rangle =(alpha | 0rangle+beta | 1 rangle ) otimes frac{1}{sqrt{2}}( |00rangle+| 11 rangle )= frac{1}{sqrt{2}}(alpha | 000rangle+alpha | 011 rangle+beta | 100 rangle+beta | 111 rangle )$ ,
then, after the measurement, we obtain the state
$|psi rangle equiv{ |00rangle frac{alpha | 0 rangle+beta | 1rangle}{2}+| 01 rangle frac{alpha | 1 rangle+beta | 0rangle}{2}+| 10 rangle frac{alpha | 0 rangle-beta | 1rangle}{2}+| 11 rangle frac{alpha | 1 rangle-beta | 0rangle}{2} }$ ,
hence we can no longer write
$| q rangle otimes | something rangle$ ,
namely, we can't factorize $| q rangle$ outside the result which implies that it didn't produce again.
New contributor
$endgroup$
I.e., if we have the entire initial state is written as follows
$| q rangle otimes | beta_{00} rangle =(alpha | 0rangle+beta | 1 rangle ) otimes frac{1}{sqrt{2}}( |00rangle+| 11 rangle )= frac{1}{sqrt{2}}(alpha | 000rangle+alpha | 011 rangle+beta | 100 rangle+beta | 111 rangle )$ ,
then, after the measurement, we obtain the state
$|psi rangle equiv{ |00rangle frac{alpha | 0 rangle+beta | 1rangle}{2}+| 01 rangle frac{alpha | 1 rangle+beta | 0rangle}{2}+| 10 rangle frac{alpha | 0 rangle-beta | 1rangle}{2}+| 11 rangle frac{alpha | 1 rangle-beta | 0rangle}{2} }$ ,
hence we can no longer write
$| q rangle otimes | something rangle$ ,
namely, we can't factorize $| q rangle$ outside the result which implies that it didn't produce again.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 37 mins ago
Student404MusStudent404Mus
163
163
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
Student404Mus is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Student404Mus is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Student404Mus is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Student404Mus is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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