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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum Measurement and Control

Claus Kiefer
- 21 Dec 2010 - 
- Vol. 27, Iss: 24, pp 249002
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TLDR
In this article, the authors present a comprehensive and accessible treatment of the theoretical tools that are needed to cope with entanglement in quantum systems and provide the reader with the necessary background information about the experimental developments.
Abstract
In the last two decades there has been an enormous progress in the experimental investigation of single quantum systems. This progress covers fields such as quantum optics, quantum computation, quantum cryptography, and quantum metrology, which are sometimes summarized as `quantum technologies'. A key issue there is entanglement, which can be considered as the characteristic feature of quantum theory. As disparate as these various fields maybe, they all have to deal with a quantum mechanical treatment of the measurement process and, in particular, the control process. Quantum control is, according to the authors, `control for which the design requires knowledge of quantum mechanics'. Quantum control situations in which measurements occur at important steps are called feedback (or feedforward) control of quantum systems and play a central role here. This book presents a comprehensive and accessible treatment of the theoretical tools that are needed to cope with these situations. It also provides the reader with the necessary background information about the experimental developments. The authors are both experts in this field to which they have made significant contributions. After an introduction to quantum measurement theory and a chapter on quantum parameter estimation, the central topic of open quantum systems is treated at some length. This chapter includes a derivation of master equations, the discussion of the Lindblad form, and decoherence – the irreversible emergence of classical properties through interaction with the environment. A separate chapter is devoted to the description of open systems by the method of quantum trajectories. Two chapters then deal with the central topic of quantum feedback control, while the last chapter gives a concise introduction to one of the central applications – quantum information. All sections contain a bunch of exercises which serve as a useful tool in learning the material. Especially helpful are also various separate boxes presenting important background material on topics such as the block representation or the feedback gain-bandwidth relation. The two appendices on quantum mechanics and phase-space and on stochastic differential equations serve the same purpose. As the authors emphasize, the book is aimed at physicists as well as control engineers who are already familiar with quantum mechanics. It takes an operational approach and presents all the material that is needed to follow research on quantum technologies. On the other hand, conceptual issues such as the relevance of the measurement process for the interpretation of quantum theory are neglected. Readers interested in them may wish to consult instead a textbook such as Decoherence and the Quantum-to-Classical Transition by Maximilian Schlosshauer. Although the present book does not contain applications to gravity, part of its content might become relevant for the physics of gravitational-wave detection and quantum gravity phenomenology. In this respect it should be of interest also for the readers of this journal.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Laser cooling of a nanomechanical oscillator into its quantum ground state

TL;DR: In this article, a coupled, nanoscale optical and mechanical resonator formed in a silicon microchip is used to cool the mechanical motion down to its quantum ground state (reaching an average phonon occupancy number of 0.85±0.08).
Journal ArticleDOI

Microwave photonics with superconducting quantum circuits

TL;DR: In the past 20 years, impressive progress has been made both experimentally and theoretically in superconducting quantum circuits, which provide a platform for manipulating microwave photons as mentioned in this paper, and many higher-order effects, unusual and less familiar in traditional cavity quantum electrodynamics with natural atoms, have been experimentally observed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum trajectories and open many-body quantum systems

TL;DR: Open quantum systems as discussed by the authors describe quantum systems exhibiting quantum coherence that are coupled to their environment, where the coupling to the environment is sufficiently well understood that it can be manipulated to drive the system into desired quantum states, or project the system onto known states via feedback in quantum measurements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Real-time quantum feedback prepares and stabilizes photon number states

TL;DR: The experiment demonstrates that active control can generate non-classical states of this oscillator and combat their decoherence, and is a significant step towards the implementation of complex quantum information operations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum control theory and applications: a survey

TL;DR: This study reviews closed-loop learning control and several important issues related to quantum feedback control including quantum filtering, feedback stabilisation, linear-quadratic-Gaussian control and robust quantum control.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Laser cooling of a nanomechanical oscillator into its quantum ground state

TL;DR: In this article, a coupled, nanoscale optical and mechanical resonator formed in a silicon microchip is used to cool the mechanical motion down to its quantum ground state (reaching an average phonon occupancy number of 0.85±0.08).
Journal ArticleDOI

Microwave photonics with superconducting quantum circuits

TL;DR: In the past 20 years, impressive progress has been made both experimentally and theoretically in superconducting quantum circuits, which provide a platform for manipulating microwave photons as mentioned in this paper, and many higher-order effects, unusual and less familiar in traditional cavity quantum electrodynamics with natural atoms, have been experimentally observed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum trajectories and open many-body quantum systems

TL;DR: Open quantum systems as discussed by the authors describe quantum systems exhibiting quantum coherence that are coupled to their environment, where the coupling to the environment is sufficiently well understood that it can be manipulated to drive the system into desired quantum states, or project the system onto known states via feedback in quantum measurements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Real-time quantum feedback prepares and stabilizes photon number states

TL;DR: The experiment demonstrates that active control can generate non-classical states of this oscillator and combat their decoherence, and is a significant step towards the implementation of complex quantum information operations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum control theory and applications: a survey

TL;DR: This study reviews closed-loop learning control and several important issues related to quantum feedback control including quantum filtering, feedback stabilisation, linear-quadratic-Gaussian control and robust quantum control.