Conditions tighter than noncommutation needed for nonclassicality
ORAL
Abstract
Kirkwood discovered in 1933, and Dirac discovered in 1945, a representation of quantum states that has undergone a renaissance recently. The Kirkwood-Dirac (KD) distribution has been employed to study nonclassicality across quantum physics, from metrology to chaos to the foundations of quantum theory. The KD distribution is a quasiprobability distribution, a quantum generalization of a probability distribution, which can behave nonclassically by having negative or nonreal elements. Negative KD elements signify quantum information scrambling and potential metrological quantum advantages. Nonreal elements encode measurement disturbance and thermodynamic nonclassicality. KD distributions' nonclassicality has been believed to follow necessarily from noncommutation of operators. We show that noncommutation does not suffice. We prove sufficient conditions for the KD distribution to be nonclassical (equivalently, necessary conditions for it to be classical). We also quantify the KD nonclassicality achievable under various conditions. This work resolves long-standing questions about nonclassicality and may be used to engineer quantum advantages.
D. R. M. Arvidsson-Shukur, J. Chevalier Drori, and N. Yunger Halpern, arXiv preprint: arXiv:2009.04468 (2020)
D. R. M. Arvidsson-Shukur, J. Chevalier Drori, and N. Yunger Halpern, arXiv preprint: arXiv:2009.04468 (2020)
–
Presenters
-
David Arvidsson-Shukur
Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory
Authors
-
David Arvidsson-Shukur
Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory
-
Jacob Chevalier Drori
Univ of Cambridge
-
Nicole Yunger Halpern
Harvard Smithsonian Institute, Harvard-Smithsonian ITAMP, Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Institute for Theoretical Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics