English

Interaction-free measurement study as a quantum channel discrimination problem

Quantum Physics 2017-12-27 v1

Abstract

Interaction-free measurement (IFM), just as its name implies, can enable one to detect an object without interacting with it, i.e., substantially reducing the damage to the object. With the help of quantum channel theory, we investigate the general model of "quantum-Zeno-like" IFM, whose optics setup is a Mach-Zehnder like interferometer utilizing the quantum Zeno effect, where the object to be detected is semitransparent and the interrogation cycle number NN is finite. And we define two important probabilities PlossP_{\rm loss} and PerrorP_{\rm error} to evaluate the IFM process, which describe the photon loss rate and the error of discriminating the presenece/absence of the object respectively. The minimum values of these two probabilities and the corresponding initial input states to reach them are attained via this model. And we find that when the interrogation cycle NN approaches infinity, the object can be perfectly detected, where the minimum values of these two probabilities are both zero and the initial input state to reach them becomes the same state 1|1\rangle in our system. In addition, we also study whether quantum correlation can benefit IFM or not, but the answer is no, in the sense that the entangled photon input state cannot minimize PlossP_{\rm loss}, PerrorP_{\rm error} more than single photon input state. Our work provides principal theoretic support for the practical realization of IFM and the employed analysis technique can be applied to other quantum facilitating scenarios.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1703.03976,
  title  = {Interaction-free measurement study as a quantum channel discrimination problem},
  author = {You Zhou and Man-Hong Yung},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1703.03976},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

15 pages, 7 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T18:43:04.151Z