An optimal discrimination of two mixed qubit states with a fixed rate of inconclusive results
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1702062
DOI10.1007/s11128-017-1722-8zbMath1387.81143arXiv1608.02695OpenAlexW2524171485MaRDI QIDQ1702062
Publication date: 27 February 2018
Published in: Quantum Information Processing (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1608.02695
quantum state discriminationminimum error discriminationinconclusive degreeinconclusive state discriminationmaximum confidence
Quantum state spaces, operational and probabilistic concepts (81P16) Quantum state estimation, approximate cloning (81P50)
Related Items (3)
Effective quantum channel for minimum error discrimination ⋮ Unambiguous discrimination between linearly dependent equidistant states with multiple copies ⋮ Revisiting unambiguous discrimination
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Quantum detection and estimation theory
- The minimum-error discrimination via Helstrom family of ensembles and convex optimization
- Deterministic quantum state transformations
- Optimum measurements for discrimination among symmetric quantum states and parameter estimation
- Minimum-error discrimination among three pure linearly independent symmetric qutrit states
- Optimal distinction between two non-orthogonal quantum states
- General strategies for discrimination of quantum states
- Optimum unambiguous discrimination of two mixed quantum states
- Discrimination of quantum states
- Optimum testing of multiple hypotheses in quantum detection theory
- Strategies for discriminating between non-orthogonal quantum states
- Designing optimal quantum detectors via semidefinite programming
- Complete solution for unambiguous discrimination of three pure states with real inner products
- Structure of minimum-error quantum state discrimination
- Quantum state discrimination and its applications
- Structural approach to unambiguous discrimination of two mixed quantum states
This page was built for publication: An optimal discrimination of two mixed qubit states with a fixed rate of inconclusive results