@article {1706, title = {Pure-state tomography with the expectation value of Pauli operators}, journal = {Physical Review A}, volume = {93}, year = {2016}, month = {2016/03/31}, pages = {032140}, abstract = {
We examine the problem of finding the minimum number of Pauli measurements needed to uniquely determine an arbitrary n-qubit pure state among all quantum states. We show that only 11 Pauli measurements are needed to determine an arbitrary two-qubit pure state compared to the full quantum state tomography with 16 measurements, and only 31 Pauli measurements are needed to determine an arbitrary three-qubit pure state compared to the full quantum state tomography with 64 measurements. We demonstrate that our protocol is robust under depolarizing error with simulated random pure states. We experimentally test the protocol on two- and three-qubit systems with nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. We show that the pure state tomography protocol saves us a number of measurements without considerable loss of fidelity. We compare our protocol with same-size sets of randomly selected Pauli operators and find that our selected set of Pauli measurements significantly outperforms those random sampling sets. As a direct application, our scheme can also be used to reduce the number of settings needed for pure-state tomography in quantum optical systems.
}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.93.032140}, url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1601.05379}, author = {Xian Ma and Tyler Jackson and Hui Zhou and Jianxin Chen and Dawei Lu and Michael D. Mazurek and Kent A.G. Fisher and Xinhua Peng and David Kribs and Kevin J. Resch and Zhengfeng Ji and Bei Zeng and Raymond Laflamme} } @article {1689, title = {Tomography is necessary for universal entanglement detection with single-copy observables}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, volume = {116}, year = {2016}, month = {2016/06/07}, pages = {230501}, abstract = {Entanglement, one of the central mysteries of quantum mechanics, plays an essential role in numerous applications of quantum information theory. A natural question of both theoretical and experimental importance is whether universal entanglement detection is possible without full state tomography. In this work, we prove a no-go theorem that rules out this possibility for any non-adaptive schemes that employ single-copy measurements only. We also examine in detail a previously implemented experiment, which claimed to detect entanglement of two-qubit states via adaptive single-copy measurements without full state tomography. By performing the experiment and analyzing the data, we demonstrate that the information gathered is indeed sufficient to reconstruct the state. These results reveal a fundamental limit for single-copy measurements in entanglement detection, and provides a general framework to study the detection of other interesting properties of quantum states, such as the positivity of partial transpose and the k-symmetric extendibility.}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.230501}, url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1511.00581}, author = {Dawei Lu and Tao Xin and Nengkun Yu and Zhengfeng Ji and Jianxin Chen and Guilu Long and Jonathan Baugh and Xinhua Peng and Bei Zeng and Raymond Laflamme} }