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Dive into the research topics where Marcus Huber is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcus Huber.


Journal of Physics A | 2016

The role of quantum information in thermodynamics—a topical review

John Goold; Marcus Huber; Arnau Riera; Lídia del Rio; Paul Skrzypczyk

This topical review article gives an overview of the interplay between quantum information theory and thermodynamics of quantum systems. We focus on several trending topics including the foundations of statistical mechanics, resource theories, entanglement in thermodynamic settings, fluctuation theorems and thermal machines. This is not a comprehensive review of the diverse field of quantum thermodynamics; rather, it is a convenient entry point for the thermo-curious information theorist. Furthermore this review should facilitate the unification and understanding of different interdisciplinary approaches emerging in research groups around the world.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Generation and confirmation of a (100 x 100)-dimensional entangled quantum system.

Mario Krenn; Marcus Huber; Robert Fickler; Radek Lapkiewicz; Sven Ramelow; Anton Zeilinger

Significance Quantum entanglement is one of the key features of quantum mechanics. Quantum systems are the basis of new paradigms in quantum computation, quantum cryptography, or quantum teleportation. By increasing the size of the entangled quantum system, a wider variety of fundamental tests as well as more realistic applications can be performed. The size of the entangled quantum state can increase with the number of particles or, as in the present paper, with the number of involved dimensions. We explore a quantum system that consists of two photons which are 100-dimensionally entangled. The dimensions investigated are the different spatial modes of photons. The result may have potential applications in quantum cryptography and other quantum information tasks. Entangled quantum systems have properties that have fundamentally overthrown the classical worldview. Increasing the complexity of entangled states by expanding their dimensionality allows the implementation of novel fundamental tests of nature, and moreover also enables genuinely new protocols for quantum information processing. Here we present the creation of a (100 × 100)-dimensional entangled quantum system, using spatial modes of photons. For its verification we develop a novel nonlinear criterion which infers entanglement dimensionality of a global state by using only information about its subspace correlations. This allows very practical experimental implementation as well as highly efficient extraction of entanglement dimensionality information. Applications in quantum cryptography and other protocols are very promising.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Detection of High-Dimensional Genuine Multipartite Entanglement of Mixed States

Marcus Huber; Florian Mintert; Andreas Gabriel; Beatrix C. Hiesmayr

We derive a general framework to identify genuinely multipartite entangled mixed quantum states in arbitrary-dimensional systems and show in exemplary cases that the constructed criteria are stronger than those previously known. Our criteria are simple functions of the given quantum state and detect genuine multipartite entanglement that had not been identified so far. They are experimentally accessible without quantum state tomography and are easily computable as no optimization or eigenvalue evaluation is needed.


Nature Communications | 2014

Interface between path and orbital angular momentum entanglement for high-dimensional photonic quantum information

Robert Fickler; Radek Lapkiewicz; Marcus Huber; Martin P. J. Lavery; Miles J. Padgett; Anton Zeilinger

Photonics has become a mature field of quantum information science, where integrated optical circuits offer a way to scale the complexity of the set-up as well as the dimensionality of the quantum state. On photonic chips, paths are the natural way to encode information. To distribute those high-dimensional quantum states over large distances, transverse spatial modes, like orbital angular momentum possessing Laguerre Gauss modes, are favourable as flying information carriers. Here we demonstrate a quantum interface between these two vibrant photonic fields. We create three-dimensional path entanglement between two photons in a nonlinear crystal and use a mode sorter as the quantum interface to transfer the entanglement to the orbital angular momentum degree of freedom. Thus our results show a flexible way to create high-dimensional spatial mode entanglement. Moreover, they pave the way to implement broad complex quantum networks where high-dimensionally entangled states could be distributed over distant photonic chips.


Physical Review A | 2012

Entanglement detection via mutually unbiased bases

Christoph Spengler; Marcus Huber; Stephen Brierley; Theodor Adaktylos; Beatrix C. Hiesmayr

We investigate correlations among complementary observables. In particular, we show how to take advantage of mutually unbiased bases (MUBs) for the detection of entanglement in arbitrarily high-dimensional quantum systems. It is shown that their properties can be exploited to construct entanglement criteria which are experimentally implementable with few local measurement settings. The introduced concepts are not restricted to bipartite finite-dimensional systems, but are also applicable to continuous variables and multipartite systems. This is demonstrated by two examples – the two-mode squeezed state and the Aharonov state. In addition, and more importantly from a theoretical point of view, we find a link between the separability problem and the maximum number of mutually unbiased bases.


Nature Photonics | 2016

Multi-photon entanglement in high dimensions

Mehul Malik; Manuel Erhard; Marcus Huber; Mario Krenn; Robert Fickler; Anton Zeilinger

A three-photon entangled state with 3 × 3 × 2 dimensions of its orbital angular momentum is created by using two independent entangled photon pairs from two nonlinear crystals, enabling the development of a new layered quantum communication protocol. Forming the backbone of quantum technologies today, entanglement1,2 has been demonstrated in physical systems as diverse as photons3, ions4 and superconducting circuits5. Although steadily pushing the boundary of the number of particles entangled, these experiments have remained in a two-dimensional space for each particle. Here we show the experimental generation of the first multi-photon entangled state where both the number of particles and dimensions are greater than two. Two photons in our state reside in a three-dimensional space, whereas the third lives in two dimensions. This asymmetric entanglement structure6 only appears in multiparticle entangled states with d > 26. Our method relies on combining two pairs of photons, high-dimensionally entangled in their orbital angular momentum7. In addition, we show how this state enables a new type of ‘layered’ quantum communication protocol. Entangled states such as these serve as a manifestation of the complex dance of correlations that can exist within quantum mechanics.


Physical Review A | 2010

Relativistic entanglement of two massive particles

Nicolai Friis; Reinhold A. Bertlmann; Marcus Huber; Beatrix C. Hiesmayr

We describe the spin and momentum degrees of freedom of a system of two massive spin--


Physical Review A | 2012

Genuinely multipartite concurrence of N-qubit X matrices

S. M. Hashemi Rafsanjani; Marcus Huber; Curtis J. Broadbent; J. H. Eberly

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Physical Review X | 2015

Extractable Work from Correlations

Martí Perarnau-Llobet; Karen V. Hovhannisyan; Marcus Huber; Paul Skrzypczyk; Nicolas Brunner; Antonio Acín

particles as a 4 qubit system. Then we explicitly show how the entanglement changes between different partitions of the qubits, when considered by different inertial observers. Although the two particle entanglement corresponding to a partition into Alices and Bobs subsystems is, as often stated in the literature, invariant under Lorentz boosts, the entanglement with respect to other partitions of the Hilbert space on the other hand, is not. It certainly does depend on the chosen inertial frame and on the initial state considered. The change of entanglement arises, because a Lorentz boost on the momenta of the particles causes a Wigner rotation of the spin, which in certain cases entangles the spin- with the momentum states. We systematically investigate the situation for different classes of initial spin states and different partitions of the 4 qubit space. Furthermore, we study the behavior of Bell inequalities for different observers and demonstrate how the maximally possible degree of violation, using the Pauli-Lubanski spin observable, can be recovered by any inertial observer.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Structure of multidimensional entanglement in multipartite systems.

Marcus Huber; Julio I. de Vicente

We find an algebraic formula for the N-partite concurrence of N qubits in an X matrix. X matrices are density matrices whose only nonzero elements are diagonal or antidiagonal when written in an orthonormal basis. We use our formula to study the dynamics of the N-partite entanglement of N remote qubits in generalized N-party Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger(GHZ)states.Westudythecaseinwhicheachqubitinteractswithalocalamplitude damping channel. It is shown that only one type of GHZ state loses its entanglement in finite time; for the rest, N-partite entanglement dies out asymptotically. Algebraic formulas for the entanglement dynamics are given in both cases. We directly confirm that the half-life of the entanglement is proportional to the inverse of N .W hen entanglement vanishes in finite time, the time at which entanglement vanishes can decrease or increase with N depending on the initial state. In the macroscopic limit, this time is independent of the initial entanglement.

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Anton Zeilinger

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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