Marie Ericsson
University of Cambridge
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marie Ericsson.
Physical Review A | 2007
Gerardo Adesso; Ivette Fuentes-Schuller; Marie Ericsson
We study the distribution of entanglement between modes of a free scalar field from the perspective of observers in uniform acceleration. We consider a two-mode squeezed state of the field from an inertial perspective, and analytically study the degradation of entanglement due to the Unruh effect, in the cases of either one or both observers undergoing uniform acceleration. We find that for two observers undergoing finite acceleration, the entanglement vanishes between the lowest frequency modes. The loss of entanglement is precisely explained as a redistribution of the inertial entanglement into multipartite quantum correlations among accessible and unaccessible modes from a non-inertial perspective. We show that classical correlations are also lost from the perspective of two accelerated observers but conserved if one of the observers remains inertial.
New Journal of Physics | 2005
Alastair Kay; Marie Ericsson
When initially introduced, a Hamiltonian that realizes perfect transfer of a quantum state was found to be analogous to an x-rotation of a large spin. In this paper, we extend the analogy further to demonstrate geometric effects by performing rotations on the spin. Such effects can be used to determine properties of the chain, such as its length, in a robust manner. Alternatively, they can form the basis of a spin network quantum computer. We demonstrate a universal set of gates in such a system by both dynamical and geometrical means.
Physical Review A | 2006
Alastair Kay; Marie Ericsson
We examine the perfect cloning of nonlocal, orthogonal states using only local operations and classical communication. We provide a complete characterisation of the states that can be cloned under these restrictions, and their relation to distinguishability. We also consider the case of catalytic cloning, which we show provides no enhancement to the set of clonable states.
Physical Review A | 2007
Gerardo Adesso; Marie Ericsson; Fabrizio Illuminati
Quantum mechanics imposes monogamy constraints on the sharing of entanglement. We show that, despite these limitations, entanglement can be fully promiscuous, i.e., simultaneously present in unlimited two-body and many-body forms in states living in an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space. Monogamy just bounds the divergence rate of the various entanglement contributions. This is demonstrated in simple families of N-mode (N{>=}4) Gaussian states of light fields or atomic ensembles, which therefore enable infinitely more freedom in the distribution of information, as opposed to systems of individual qubits. Such a finding is of importance for the quantification, understanding, and potential exploitation of shared quantum correlations in continuous variable systems. We discuss how promiscuity gradually arises when considering simple families of discrete variable states, with increasing Hilbert space dimension towards the continuous variable limit. Such models are somehow analogous to Gaussian states with asymptotically diverging, but finite, squeezing. In this respect, we find that non-Gaussian states (which in general are more entangled than Gaussian states) exhibit also the interesting feature that their entanglement is more shareable: in the non-Gaussian multipartite arena, unlimited promiscuity can be already achieved among three entangled parties, while this is impossible for Gaussian, even infinitely squeezed states.
Physics Letters A | 2008
Marie Ericsson; David Kult; Erik Sjöqvist; Johan Åberg
Nodal free geometric phases are the eigenvalues of the final member of a parallel transporting family of unitary operators. These phases are gauge invariant, always well defined, and can be measured interferometrically. Nodal free geometric phases can be used to construct various types of quantum phase gates.
Optics and Spectroscopy | 2007
Gerardo Adesso; Marie Ericsson
We study Gaussian valence bond states of continuous variable systems obtained as the outputs of projection operations from an ancillary space of M infinitely entangled bonds connecting neighboring sites applied at each ofN sites of a harmonic chain. The entanglement distribution in Gaussian valence bond states can be controlled by varying the input amount of entanglement engineered in a (2M+ 1)-mode Gaussian state known as the building block, which is isomorphic to the projector applied at a given site. We show how this mechanism can be interpreted in terms of multiple entanglement swapping from the chain of ancillary bonds, through the building blocks. We provide optical schemes to produce bisymmetric three-mode Gaussian building blocks (which correspond to a single bond, M = 1), and study the entanglement structure in the output Gaussian valence bond states. Finally, the usefulness of such states for quantum communication protocols with continuous variables, like telecloning and teleportation networks, is discussed.
Physical Review A | 2006
Gerardo Adesso; Marie Ericsson
Gaussian matrix product states are obtained as the outputs of projection operations from an ancillary space of M infinitely entangled bonds connecting neighboring sites, applied at each of N sites of an harmonic chain. Replacing the projections by associated Gaussian states, the building blocks, we show that the entanglement range in translationally-invariant Gaussian matrix product states depends on how entangled the building blocks are. In particular, infinite entanglement in the building blocks produces fully symmetric Gaussian states with maximum entanglement range. From their peculiar properties of entanglement sharing, a basic difference with spin chains is revealed: Gaussian matrix product states can possess unlimited, long-range entanglement even with minimum number of ancillary bonds (M=1). Finally we discuss how these states can be experimentally engineered from N copies of a three-mode building block and N two-mode finitely squeezed states.
Archive | 2006
Gerardo Adesso; Marie Ericsson
Archive | 2006
Gerardo Adesso; Marie Ericsson
Archive | 2006
Gerardo Adesso; Marie Ericsson; Fabrizio Illuminati