Talk titles and abstracts are below.
Schedule
- 12:00 Alexander Retzker (Imperial) -- Detection of Acceleration Radiation in a Bose-Einstein Condensate.
- 12:45 Libby Heaney (Leeds) -- Entanglement in the Bose-Einstein Condensate Phase Transition.
- LUNCH
- 14:30 Joe Fitzsimons (Oxford) -- TBA
- 15:00 Etienne Brion (Imperial) -- Quantum Computing with Collective Ensembles of Multi-Level Systems.
- COFFEE
- 16:00 Rob Spekkens (Cambridge) -- Negativity and Contextuality Are Equivalent Notions of Nonclassicality.
- 16:30 Bob Coecke (Oxford) -- The logic of Spekkens' toy model
Abstracts
Detection of
acceleration radiation in a Bose-Einstein
condensate.
Alex
Retzker
We propose and study methods for detecting the Unruh effect in a
Bose-Einstein condensate. The Bogoliubov vacuum of a Bose-Einstein
condensate is used here to simulate a scalar field-theory, and
accelerated atom dots or optical lattices as means for detecting
phonon radiation due to acceleration effects. We study Unruh's
effect for linear acceleration and circular acceleration. In
particular, we study the dispersive effects of the Bogoliubov
spectrum on the ideal case of exact thermalization. Our results
suggest that Unruh's acceleration radiation can be tested using
current accessible experimental methods.
Entanglement in
the Bose-Einstein Condensate Phase Transition
Libby
Heaney
As a Bose gas is cooled below the transition temperature for
condensation strong correlations begin to form between all
points in space. This spatial coherence is mathematically
described by the one-bodied reduced density matrix, which
measures the overlap of a particles wavefunction at two
different points in space. As previous work has indicated
that particle number entanglement also exists between
regions of space in a BEC, it is interesting to ask whether
the phenomena of spatial coherence and entanglement are
related. The aim of this talk is to explore this
relationship. Intriguingly, I will show that entanglement
in the gas can be detected by quantities that are dependent
on the one-bodied reduced density matrix and we will see
that spatial coherence between regions of space is necessary
but by no means sufficient for entanglement.
TBA
Joe Fitzsimons
Quantum Computing with Collective Ensembles of Multi-Level Systems
Etienne
Brion
In this talk, I shall present a new physical approach for
encoding and processing of quantum information in ensembles
of multi-level quantum systems. In this new framework,
the different bits are not carried by individual particles
but associated with the collective population of different
internal levels. One- and two-bit gates are implemented by
collective internal state transitions taking place in the
presence of an excitation blockade mechanism which restricts
the population of each internal state to the values zero and
unity. Via this scheme, 10-20 bit quantum computers can be
built in single trapped clouds of ground state atoms subject
to the Rydberg excitation blockade mechanism, and the linear
dependence between register size and the number of internal
quantum states in atoms offers realistic means to reach
larger registers.
Negativity and
Contextuality Are Equivalent Notions of
Nonclassicality
Rob
Spekkens
It is common to assert that the discovery of quantum theory overthrew our
classical conception of nature. But what, precisely, was overthrown? Two
notions of nonclassicality that have been investigated intensively are: (1)
negativity, that is, the need to posit negative probabilities when
representing quantum states by real functions on classical state spaces, for
instance, when using Wigner's representation on phase space, and (2)
contextuality, that is, the impossibility of a hidden variable model of
quantum theory wherein the representation of measurements does not depend on
the context of the measurement. Although both of these notions were meant to
characterize the conditions under which a classical explanation cannot be
provided, I demonstrate that they are inadequate to the task and I argue for
a particular way of generalizing and revising them. With the refined version
of each in hand, it becomes apparent that they are in fact one and the same.
The logic of
Spekkens' toy model
Bob
Coecke
We recast Spekkens' toy model [Spek] as a categorical
construction on the category Rel of sets, relations and
cartesian product. This category Rel, by being a so-called
`dagger-compact category' [AC], already supports typical
quantum structural features such as full-blown Dirac
notation including inner-product, adjoints, projectors,
unitarity, trace, map-state duality [Kind], as well as the
construction of mixed-states and completely positive maps
[Sel], and in particular, tensor structure, which is in fact
the source to all the above. Rel also contains a classical
objects [CP1] from which arise superpositions, GHZ-states,
POVMs, decoherence structure and corresponding emergent
classicality [CP2, CPP]. What Rel however manifestly lacks
is `the' key quantum concept of complementarity: each system
comes with only a single observable. What Spekkens'
construction adjoins to Rel is exactly Pauli-type
complementarity. We contrast the way in which
complementarity arise from a propositional structure (=
question set) as compared to the Birkhoff-von Neumann-Piron
conception of how quantumness (superposition and
complementarity that is in this case) arises from
propositional structure [Moo, CMW].
[Spek] R. Spekkens (...) ... toy-theory ...
[AC] S. Abramsky and B. Coecke (2004) A categorical semantics of quantum protocols. arXiv:quant-ph/0402130
[Coe] B. Coecke (2005) Kindergarten quantum mechanics. arXiv:quant-ph/0510032
[Sel] P. Selinger (2007) Dagger compact categories and completely positive maps. Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science 170, 139--163.
[CP1] B. Coecke and D. Pavlovic (2006) Quantum measurements without sums. arXiv:quant-ph/0608035
[CP2] B. Coecke and E. O. Paquette (2006) POVMs and Naimark's theorem without sums. arXiv:quant-ph/0608072
[CPP] B. Coecke, E. O. Paquette and D. Pavlovic (2008) Classical structures from tensorial quantum structures. Draft paper.
[Moo] D. J. Moore (1999) On State Spaces and Property Lattices. Studies in the History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 30, 61--83.
[CMW] B. Coecke, D.J. Moore and A. Wilce (2000) Operational quantum logic: An overview. arXiv:quant-ph/0008019
These meetings are supported by the QIPIRC.
