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Dive into the research topics where Kavan Modi is active.

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Featured researches published by Kavan Modi.


Reviews of Modern Physics | 2012

The classical-quantum boundary for correlations : discord and related measures

Kavan Modi; Aharon Brodutch; Hugo Cable; Tomasz Paterek; Vlatko Vedral

One of the best signatures of nonclassicality in a quantum system is the existence of correlations that have no classical counterpart. Different methods for quantifying the quantum and classical parts of correlations are amongst the more actively-studied topics of quantum information theory over the past decade. Entanglement is the most prominent of these correlations, but in many cases unentangled states exhibit nonclassical behavior too. Thus distinguishing quantum correlations other than entanglement provides a better division between the quantum and classical worlds, especially when considering mixed states. Here we review different notions of classical and quantum correlations quantified by quantum discord and other related measures. In the first half, we review the mathematical properties of the measures of quantum correlations, relate them to each other, and discuss the classical-quantum division that is common among them. In the second half, we show that the measures identify and quantify the deviation from classicality in various quantum-information-processing tasks, quantum thermodynamics, open-system dynamics, and many-body physics. We show that in many cases quantum correlations indicate an advantage of quantum methods over classical ones.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Unified View of Quantum and Classical Correlations

Kavan Modi; Tomasz Paterek; Wonmin Son; Vlatko Vedral; Mark S. Williamson

We discuss the problem of the separation of total correlations in a given quantum state into entanglement, dissonance, and classical correlations using the concept of relative entropy as a distance measure of correlations. This allows us to put all correlations on an equal footing. Entanglement and dissonance, whose definition is introduced here, jointly belong to what is known as quantum discord. Our methods are completely applicable for multipartite systems of arbitrary dimensions. We investigate additivity relations between different correlations and show that dissonance may be present in pure multipartite states.


Physical Review A | 2011

Operational interpretations of quantum discord

Daniel Cavalcanti; Leandro Aolita; Sergio Boixo; Kavan Modi; Marco Piani; Andreas Winter

Quantum discord quantifies nonclassical correlations beyond the standard classification of quantum states into entangled and unentangled. Although it has received considerable attention, it still lacks any precise interpretation in terms of some protocol in which quantum features are relevant. Here we give quantum discord its first information-theoretic operational meaning in terms of entanglement consumption in an extended quantum-state-merging protocol. We further relate the asymmetry of quantum discord with the performance imbalance in quantum state merging and dense coding.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Quantum discord bounds the amount of distributed entanglement

T K Chuan; J P Maillard; Kavan Modi; Tomasz Paterek; Mauro Paternostro; Marco Piani

The ability to distribute quantum entanglement is a prerequisite for many fundamental tests of quantum theory and numerous quantum information protocols. Two distant parties can increase the amount of entanglement between them by means of quantum communication encoded in a carrier that is sent from one party to the other. Intriguingly, entanglement can be increased even when the exchanged carrier is not entangled with the parties. However, in light of the defining property of entanglement stating that it cannot increase under classical communication, the carrier must be quantum. Here we show that, in general, the increase of relative entropy of entanglement between two remote parties is bounded by the amount of nonclassical correlations of the carrier with the parties as quantified by the relative entropy of discord. We study implications of this bound, provide new examples of entanglement distribution via unentangled states, and put further limits on this phenomenon.


Physical Review A | 2011

Detecting multipartite classical states and their resemblances

Lin Chen; Eric Chitambar; Kavan Modi; Giovanni Vacanti

Department of Physics and Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering,University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3G4, Canada(Dated: September 27, 2010)We study various types of multipartite states lying near the quantum-classical boundary. Theclass of so-called classical states are precisely those in which each party can perform a projectivemeasurement to identify a locally held state without disturbing the global state, a task knownas non-disruptive local state identi cation (NDLID). We introduce a new class of states calledgeneralized-classical states which allow for NDLID when the most general quantum measurementsare permitted. A simple analytic method as well as a physical criterion are presented for detectingwhether a multipartite state is classical. To decide whether a state is generalized-classical, weprovide a semi-de nite programming algorithm which can be adapted for use in other unrelatedcontexts such as signal processing.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2016

Experimental demonstration of information to energy conversion in a quantum system at the Landauer limit

J. P. S. Peterson; R. S. Sarthour; Alexandre M. Souza; I. S. Oliveira; John Goold; Kavan Modi; D. O. Soares-Pinto; Lucas C. Céleri

Landauer’s principle sets fundamental thermodynamical constraints for classical and quantum information processing, thus affecting not only various branches of physics, but also of computer science and engineering. Despite its importance, this principle was only recently experimentally considered for classical systems. Here we employ a nuclear magnetic resonance set-up to experimentally address the information to energy conversion in a quantum system. Specifically, we consider a three nuclear spins S=12 (qubits) molecule—the system, the reservoir and the ancilla—to measure the heat dissipated during the implementation of a global system–reservoir unitary interaction that changes the information content of the system. By employing an interferometric technique, we were able to reconstruct the heat distribution associated with the unitary interaction. Then, through quantum state tomography, we measured the relative change in the entropy of the system. In this way, we were able to verify that an operation that changes the information content of the system must necessarily generate heat in the reservoir, exactly as predicted by Landauer’s principle. The scheme presented here allows for the detailed study of irreversible entropy production in quantum information processors.


Physical Review X | 2011

Quantum correlations in mixed-state metrology

Kavan Modi; Hugo Cable; Mark S. Williamson; Vlatko Vedral

We analyze the effects of quantum correlations, such as entanglement and discord, on the efficiency of phase estimation by studying four quantum circuits that can be readily implemented using NMR techniques. These circuits define a standard strategy of repeated single-qubit measurements, a classical strategy where only classical correlations are allowed, and two quantum strategies where nonclassical correlations are allowed. In addition to counting space (number of qubits) and time (number of gates) requirements, we introduce mixedness as a key constraint of the experiment. We compare the efficiency of the four strategies as a function of the mixedness parameter. We find that the quantum strategy gives square-root of N enhancement over the standard strategy for the same amount of mixedness. This result applies even for highly mixed states that have nonclassical correlations but no entanglement.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Nonequilibrium quantum Landauer principle

John Goold; Mauro Paternostro; Kavan Modi

Using the operational framework of completely positive, trace preserving operations and thermodynamic fluctuation relations, we derive a lower bound for the heat exchange in a Landauer erasure process on a quantum system. Our bound comes from a nonphenomenological derivation of the Landauer principle which holds for generic nonequilibrium dynamics. Furthermore, the bound depends on the nonunitality of dynamics, giving it a physical significance that differs from other derivations. We apply our framework to the model of a spin-1/2 system coupled to an interacting spin chain at finite temperature.


International Journal of Quantum Information | 2011

QUANTUM LOCKING OF CLASSICAL CORRELATIONS AND QUANTUM DISCORD OF CLASSICAL-QUANTUM STATES

Sergio Boixo; Leandro Aolita; Daniel Cavalcanti; Kavan Modi; Andreas Winter

A locking protocol between two parties is as follows: Alice gives an encrypted classical message to Bob which she does not want Bob to be able to read until she gives him the key. If Alice is using classical resources, and she wants to approach unconditional security, then the key and the message must have comparable sizes. But if Alice prepares a quantum state, the size of the key can be comparatively negligible. This effect is called quantum locking. Entanglement does not play a role in this quantum advantage. We show that, in this scenario, the quantum discord quantifies the advantage of the quantum protocol over the corresponding classical one for any classical-quantum state.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Operational approach to open dynamics and quantifying initial correlations

Kavan Modi

A central aim of physics is to describe the dynamics of physical systems. Schrödingers equation does this for isolated quantum systems. Describing the time evolution of a quantum system that interacts with its environment, in its most general form, has proved to be difficult because the dynamics is dependent on the state of the environment and the correlations with it. For discrete processes, such as quantum gates or chemical reactions, quantum process tomography provides the complete description of the dynamics, provided that the initial states of the system and the environment are independent of each other. However, many physical systems are correlated with the environment at the beginning of the experiment. Here, we give a prescription of quantum process tomography that yields the complete description of the dynamics of the system even when the initial correlations are present. Surprisingly, our method also gives quantitative expressions for the initial correlation.

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Vlatko Vedral

National University of Singapore

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Mile Gu

National University of Singapore

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John Goold

International Centre for Theoretical Physics

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Mauro Paternostro

Queen's University Belfast

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Tomasz Paterek

National University of Singapore

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Sai Vinjanampathy

National University of Singapore

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Vlatko Vedral

National University of Singapore

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Helen Chrzanowski

Australian National University

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