Publication | Open Access
Minimum error probability of quantum illumination
73
Citations
38
References
2018
Year
EngineeringQuantum MeasurementQuantum SensingQuantum ProbeQuantum ComputingQuantum Optimization AlgorithmQuantum EntanglementQuantum SciencePhotonicsPhysicsQuantum InformationPhoton StatisticQuantum IlluminationQuantum OpticNatural SciencesQuantum CommunicationMinimum Error ProbabilityOptimal ProbesQuantum Error Correction
Quantum illumination is a technique for detecting the presence of a target in a noisy environment by means of a quantum probe. We prove that the two-mode squeezed vacuum state is the optimal probe for quantum illumination in the scenario of asymmetric discrimination, where the goal is to minimize the decay rate of the probability of a false positive with a given probability of a false negative. Quantum illumination with two-mode squeezed vacuum states offers a 6 dB advantage in the error probability exponent compared to illumination with coherent states. Whether more advanced quantum illumination strategies may offer further improvements had been a longstanding open question. Our fundamental result proves that nothing can be gained by considering more exotic quantum states, such as, e.g., multimode entangled states. Our proof is based on a fundamental entropic inequality for the noisy quantum Gaussian attenuators. We also prove that without access to a quantum memory, the optimal probes for quantum illumination are the coherent states.
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