English

Quantum limits on probabilistic amplifiers

Quantum Physics 2013-10-04 v3

Abstract

An ideal phase-preserving linear amplifier is a deterministic device that adds to an input signal the minimal amount of noise consistent with the constraints imposed by quantum mechanics. A noiseless linear amplifier takes an input coherent state to an amplified coherent state, but only works part of the time. Such a device is actually better than noiseless, since the output has less noise than the amplified noise of the input coherent state; for this reason we refer to such devices as {\em immaculate}. Here we bound the working probabilities of probabilistic and approximate immaculate amplifiers and construct theoretical models that achieve some of these bounds. Our chief conclusions are the following: (i) the working probability of any phase-insensitive immaculate amplifier is very small in the phase-plane region where the device works with high fidelity; (ii) phase-sensitive immaculate amplifiers that work only on coherent states sparsely distributed on a phase-plane circle centered at the origin can have a reasonably high working probability.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1304.3901,
  title  = {Quantum limits on probabilistic amplifiers},
  author = {Shashank Pandey and Zhang Jiang and Joshua Combes and Carlton M. Caves},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1304.3901},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

V1: 20 pages, 8 figures. V2: 24 pages, 9 figures, and significantly revised text. V3 published version (minor changes)

R2 v1 2026-06-21T23:59:18.775Z