The role of relative entropy in quantum information theory

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Publication:3077102

DOI10.1103/REVMODPHYS.74.197zbMATH Open1205.81053arXivquant-ph/0102094WikidataQ27348988 ScholiaQ27348988MaRDI QIDQ3077102FDOQ3077102


Authors: Vlatko Vedral Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 21 February 2011

Published in: Reviews of Modern Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: Quantum mechanics and information theory are among the most important scientific discoveries of the last century. Although these two areas initially developed separately it has emerged that they are in fact intimately related. In this review I will show how quantum information theory extends traditional information theory by exploring the limits imposed by quantum, rather than classical mechanics on information storage and transmission. The derivation of many key results uniquely differentiates this review from the "usual" presentation in that they are shown to follow logically from one crucial property of relative entropy. Within the review optimal bounds on the speed-up that quantum computers can achieve over their classical counter-parts are outlined using information theoretic arguments. In addition important implications of quantum information theory to thermodynamics and quantum measurement are intermittently discussed. A number of simple examples and derivations including quantum super-dense coding, quantum teleportation, Deutsch's and Grover's algorithms are also included.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0102094






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