Effect of quantum noise on deterministic joint remote state preparation of a qubit state via a GHZ channel

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Publication:513465

DOI10.1007/S11128-016-1430-9zbMATH Open1357.81054arXiv1606.02484OpenAlexW2512358835MaRDI QIDQ513465FDOQ513465


Authors: Ming-Ming Wang, Zhiguo Qu Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 6 March 2017

Published in: Quantum Information Processing (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: Quantum secure communication brings a new direction for information security. As an important component of quantum secure communication, deterministic joint remote state preparation (DJRSP) could securely transmit a quantum state with 100% success probability. In this paper, we study how the efficiency of DJRSP is affected when qubits involved in the protocol are subjected to noise or decoherence. Taking a GHZ based DJRSP scheme as an example, we study all types of noise usually encountered in real-world implementations of quantum communication protocols, i.e., the bit-flip, phase-flip (phase-damping), depolarizing, and amplitude-damping noise. Our study shows that the fidelity of the output state depends on the phase factor, the amplitude factor and the noise parameter in the bit-flip noise, while the fidelity only depends on the amplitude factor and the noise parameter in the other three types of noise. And the receiver will get different output states depending on the first preparer's measurement result in the amplitude-damping noise. Our results will be helpful for improving quantum secure communication in real implementation.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1606.02484




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