Receiver Design to Harness Quantum Illumination Advantage
Abstract
An optical transmitter that uses entangled light generated by spontaneous parametric downconversion (SPDC), in conjunction with an optimal quantum-optical receiver (whose implementation is not yet known) is in principle capable of obtaining up to a 6 dB gain in the error-probability exponent over the optimum-reception un-entangled coherent-state lidar to detect the presence of a far-away target subject to entanglement-breaking loss and noise in the free-space link [Lloyd'08, Tan'08]. We present an explicit design of a structured quantum-illumination receiver, which in conjunction with the SPDC transmitter is shown to achieve up to a 3 dB error-exponent advantage over the classical sensor. Apart from being fairly feasible for a proof-of-principle demonstration, this is to our knowledge the first structured design of a quantum-optical sensor for target detection that outperforms the comparable best classical lidar sensor appreciably in a low-brightness, lossy and noisy operating regime.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0902.2932,
title = {Receiver Design to Harness Quantum Illumination Advantage},
author = {Saikat Guha},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0902.2932},
year = {2016}
}
Comments
5 pages, 3 figures; to appear in Proceedings of 2009 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory