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Dive into the research topics where Che Ming Li is active.

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Featured researches published by Che Ming Li.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Witnessing Quantum Coherence: from solid-state to biological systems

Che Ming Li; Neill Lambert; Yueh Nan Chen; Guang Yin Chen; Franco Nori

Quantum coherence is one of the primary non-classical features of quantum systems. While protocols such as the Leggett-Garg inequality (LGI) and quantum tomography can be used to test for the existence of quantum coherence and dynamics in a given system, unambiguously detecting inherent “quantumness” still faces serious obstacles in terms of experimental feasibility and efficiency, particularly in complex systems. Here we introduce two “quantum witnesses” to efficiently verify quantum coherence and dynamics in the time domain, without the expense and burden of non-invasive measurements or full tomographic processes. Using several physical examples, including quantum transport in solid-state nanostructures and in biological organisms, we show that these quantum witnesses are robust and have a much finer resolution in their detection window than the LGI has. These robust quantum indicators may assist in reducing the experimental overhead in unambiguously verifying quantum coherence in complex systems.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Quantifying Non-Markovianity with Temporal Steering.

Shin Liang Chen; Neill Lambert; Che Ming Li; Adam Miranowicz; Yueh Nan Chen; Franco Nori

Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) steering is a type of quantum correlation which allows one to remotely prepare, or steer, the state of a distant quantum system. While EPR steering can be thought of as a purely spatial correlation, there does exist a temporal analogue, in the form of single-system temporal steering. However, a precise quantification of such temporal steering has been lacking. Here, we show that it can be measured, via semidefinite programing, with a temporal steerable weight, in direct analogy to the recently proposed EPR steerable weight. We find a useful property of the temporal steerable weight in that it is a nonincreasing function under completely positive trace-preserving maps and can be used to define a sufficient and practical measure of strong non-Markovianity.


Physical Review A | 2014

Temporal steering inequality

Yueh Nan Chen; Che Ming Li; Neill Lambert; Shin Liang Chen; Yukihiro Ota; Guang Yin Chen; Franco Nori

Quantum steering is the ability to remotely prepare different quantum states by using entangled pairs as a resource. Very recently, the concept of steering has been quantified with the use of inequalities, leading to substantial applications in quantum information and communication science. Here, we highlight that there exists a natural temporal analogue of the steering inequality when considering measurements on a single object at different times. We give non-trivial operational meaning to violations of this temporal inequality by showing that it is connected to the security bound in the BB84 protocol and thus may have applications in quantum communication.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Genuine High-Order Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen Steering.

Che Ming Li; Kai Chen; Yueh Nan Chen; Qiang Zhang; Yu-Ao Chen; Jian-Wei Pan

Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) steering demonstrates that two parties share entanglement even if the measurement devices of one party are untrusted. Here, going beyond this bipartite concept, we develop a novel formalism to explore a large class of EPR steering from generic multipartite quantum systems of arbitrarily high dimensionality and degrees of freedom, such as graph states and hyperentangled systems. All of these quantum characteristics of genuine high-order EPR steering can be efficiently certified with few measurement settings in experiments. We faithfully demonstrate for the first time such generality by experimentally showing genuine four-partite EPR steering and applications to universal one-way quantum computing. Our formalism provides a new insight into the intermediate type of genuine multipartite Bell nonlocality and potential applications to quantum information tasks and experiments in the presence of untrusted measurement devices.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Spatio-Temporal Steering for Testing Nonclassical Correlations in Quantum Networks

Shin Liang Chen; Neill Lambert; Che Ming Li; Guang Yin Chen; Yueh Nan Chen; Adam Miranowicz; Franco Nori

We introduce the concept of spatio-temporal steering (STS), which reduces, in special cases, to Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering and the recently-introduced temporal steering. We describe two measures of this effect referred to as the STS weight and robustness. We suggest that these STS measures enable a new way to assess nonclassical correlations in an open quantum network, such as quantum transport through nano-structures or excitation transfer in a complex biological system. As one of our examples, we apply STS to check nonclassical correlations among sites in a photosynthetic pigment-protein complex in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson model.


Optics Letters | 2012

Generating maximum entanglement under asymmetric couplings to surface plasmons

Guang Yin Chen; Che Ming Li; Yueh Nan Chen

Generating entangled states is a vital ingredient for quantum information engineering. Here, we investigate the entanglement generation between two quantum dots coupled to nanoring surface plasmons with asymmetric coupling strength g(1) and g(2). The dynamics of concurrence C is obtained by solving the corresponding master equation. High entanglement can be generated at appropriate times through the scatterings of the incident field and its scattered field. Furthermore, we find that maximum entanglement can be created when r≡g(1)/g(2) is the ratio of odd numbers. Contrary to intuition, relative high entanglement (C≃1) can remain even if the ratio r is far off the required values, which is useful in real experiments.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Delocalized single-photon Dicke states and the Leggett-Garg inequality in solid state systems

Guang Yin Chen; Neill Lambert; Che Ming Li; Yueh Nan Chen; Franco Nori

We show how to realize a single-photon Dicke state in a large one-dimensional array of two-level systems, and discuss how to test its quantum properties. The realization of single-photon Dicke states relies on the cooperative nature of the interaction between a field reservoir and an array of two-level-emitters. The resulting dynamics of the delocalized state can display Rabi-like oscillations when the number of two-level emitters exceeds several hundred. In this case, the large array of emitters is essentially behaving like a “mirror-less cavity”. We outline how this might be realized using a multiple-quantum-well structure or a dc-SQUID array coupled to a transmission line, and discuss how the quantum nature of these oscillations could be tested with an extension of the Leggett-Garg inequality.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Examining non-locality and quantum coherent dynamics induced by a common reservoir

Guang Yin Chen; Shin Liang Chen; Che Ming Li; Yueh Nan Chen

If two identical emitters are coupled to a common reservoir, entanglement can be generated during the decay process. When using Bells inequality to examine the non-locality, however, it is possible that the bound cannot be violated in some cases. Here, we propose to use the steering inequality to examine the non-locality induced by a common reservoir. Compared with the Bell inequality, we find that the steering inequality has a better tolerance for examining non-locality. In view of the dynamic nature of the entangling process, we also propose to observe the quantum coherent dynamics by using the Leggett-Garg inequalities. We also suggest a feasible scheme, which consists of two quantum dots coupled to nanowire surface plasmons, for possible experimental realization.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Experimental violation of Bell inequalities for multi-dimensional systems.

Hsin Pin Lo; Che Ming Li; Atsushi Yabushita; Yueh Nan Chen; Chih-Wei Luo; Takayoshi Kobayashi

Quantum correlations between spatially separated parts of a d-dimensional bipartite system (d ≥ 2) have no classical analog. Such correlations, also called entanglements, are not only conceptually important, but also have a profound impact on information science. In theory the violation of Bell inequalities based on local realistic theories for d-dimensional systems provides evidence of quantum nonlocality. Experimental verification is required to confirm whether a quantum system of extremely large dimension can possess this feature, however it has never been performed for large dimension. Here, we report that Bell inequalities are experimentally violated for bipartite quantum systems of dimensionality d = 16 with the usual ensembles of polarization-entangled photon pairs. We also estimate that our entanglement source violates Bell inequalities for extremely high dimensionality of d > 4000. The designed scenario offers a possible new method to investigate the entanglement of multipartite systems of large dimensionality and their application in quantum information processing.


Optics Communications | 2018

Experimental verification of multidimensional quantum steering

Che Ming Li; Hsin Pin Lo; Liang Yu Chen; Atsushi Yabushita

Abstract Quantum steering enables one party to communicate with another remote party even if the sender is untrusted. Such characteristics of quantum systems not only provide direct applications to quantum information science, but are also conceptually important for distinguishing between quantum and classical resources. While concrete illustrations of steering have been shown in several experiments, quantum steering has not been certified for higher dimensional systems. Here, we introduce a simple method to experimentally certify two different kinds of quantum steering: Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen (EPR) steering and single-system (SS) steering (i.e., temporal steering), for dimensionality ( d ) up to d = 16 . The former reveals the steerability among bipartite systems, whereas the latter manifests itself in single quantum objects. We use multidimensional steering witnesses to verify EPR steering of polarization-entangled pairs and SS steering of single photons. The ratios between the measured witnesses and the maximum values achieved by classical mimicries are observed to increase with d for both EPR and SS steering. The designed scenario offers a new method to study further the genuine multipartite steering of large dimensionality and potential uses in quantum information processing.

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Yueh Nan Chen

National Cheng Kung University

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Franco Nori

University of Michigan

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Guang Yin Chen

National Chung Hsing University

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Shin Liang Chen

National Cheng Kung University

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Atsushi Yabushita

National Chiao Tung University

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Adam Miranowicz

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Chih-Wei Luo

National Chiao Tung University

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Hsin Pin Lo

National Chiao Tung University

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Qiang Zhang

University of Science and Technology of China

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Yu-Ao Chen

University of Science and Technology of China

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