2
talks
0
committee roles
0
leadership roles
2021–2022
years active
Contributions
QIP QCrypt TQC presenter award · △program ◇steering ○organising □local · filled = chair
Talks
| Title | Conference | Type | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quantum Theory Needs Complex Numbers | QIP 2022 | plenary_short | ▸Marc-Olivier Renou, David Trillo, Thinh Le Phuc, Armin Tavakoli, Nicolas Gisin, Antonio Acin, Miguel Navascués |
| Quantum Preparation Games | QIP 2021 | regular | Edgar A. Aguilar, Miguel Navascués |
Abstract A preparation game is a task whereby a player sequentially sends a number of quantum states to a referee, who probes each of them and announces the measurement result. The measurement setting in each round, as well as the final score of the game, are decided by the referee based on the past history of settings and measurement outcomes. Many experimental tasks in quantum information, such as entanglement quantification or magic state detection, can be cast as preparation games. In this paper, we introduce general methods to design n-round preparation games, with tight bounds on the average game scores achievable by players subject to constraints on their preparation devices. We illustrate our results by devising new adaptive measurement protocols for entanglement detection and quantification. Surprisingly, we find that the standard procedure in entanglement detection, namely, estimating n times the average value of a given entanglement witness, is in general sub-optimal for detecting the entanglement of a specific quantum state. On the contrary, there exist n-round experimental scenarios where detecting the entanglement of a known state optimally requires adaptive measurement schemes. |
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Collaborators
| Co-author | Joint talks |
|---|---|
| Miguel Navascués | 2 |
| Antonio Acin | 1 |
| Armin Tavakoli | 1 |
| David Trillo | 1 |
| Edgar A. Aguilar | 1 |
| Marc-Olivier Renou | 1 |
| Nicolas Gisin | 1 |
| Thinh Le Phuc | 1 |