2015
DOI: 10.1103/physreva.91.032316
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Quantum teleportation with identical particles

Abstract: We study teleportation with identical massive particles. Indistinguishability imposes that the relevant degrees of freedom to be teleported are not particles, but rather addressable orthogonal modes. We discuss the performances of teleportation under the constraint of conservation of the total number of particles. The latter inevitably decreases the teleportation fidelity. Moreover, even though a phase reference, given by the coupling to a reservoir, circumverts the constraint, it does not restore perfect dete… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(66 citation statements)
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References 101 publications
(345 reference statements)
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“…For instance, bipartitions with respect to different spin components were considered recently [51]. Mathematically, we deal with the algebraic bipartition in the second quantized description [52][53][54][55][56], which is used in the study of entanglement [45,[57][58][59][60].…”
Section: Spectra Of Mode-reduced Statesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, bipartitions with respect to different spin components were considered recently [51]. Mathematically, we deal with the algebraic bipartition in the second quantized description [52][53][54][55][56], which is used in the study of entanglement [45,[57][58][59][60].…”
Section: Spectra Of Mode-reduced Statesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This implies that any other quantum protocol using sLOCC in the same system can be analogously processed. The teleportation mechanism here described basically differs from previous ones using identical particles, based on entangled particle number states [36,37].…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Nowadays, entanglement is required in nearly all quantum communication and computation protocols [3], such as quantum teleportation [4][5][6][7], dense coding [8,9], quantum key distribution (QKD) [10][11][12], quantum secure direct communication [13][14][15], quantum computation [16][17][18][19], and other protocols [20][21][22][23]. During the past decade, with the rapid development of the experimental process on quantum control, there is a rapidly growing interest in entanglement generation [24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%