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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Statistical Geometry in Quantum Mechanics

TLDR
In this paper, the authors formulate the principles of classical statistical inference in a natural geometric setting, and establish generalisations of the classical Cramer-Rao and Bhattacharyya inequalities.
Abstract
A statistical model M is a family of probability distributions, characterised by a set of continuous parameters known as the parameter space. This possesses natural geometrical properties induced by the embedding of the family of probability distributions into the Hilbert space H. By consideration of the square-root density function we can regard M as a submanifold of the unit sphere in H. Therefore, H embodies the `state space' of the probability distributions, and the geometry of M can be described in terms of the embedding of in H. The geometry in question is characterised by a natural Riemannian metric (the Fisher-Rao metric), thus allowing us to formulate the principles of classical statistical inference in a natural geometric setting. In particular, we focus attention on the variance lower bounds for statistical estimation, and establish generalisations of the classical Cramer-Rao and Bhattacharyya inequalities. The statistical model M is then specialised to the case of a submanifold of the state space of a quantum mechanical system. This is pursued by introducing a compatible complex structure on the underlying real Hilbert space, which allows the operations of ordinary quantum mechanics to be reinterpreted in the language of real Hilbert space geometry. The application of generalised variance bounds in the case of quantum statistical estimation leads to a set of higher order corrections to the Heisenberg uncertainty relations for canonically conjugate observables.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Geometric quantum mechanics

TL;DR: In this paper, a locally invariant measure is assigned to the degree of entanglement of a given state for a general multi-particle system, and the properties of this measure are analysed for the entangled states of a pair of spin 1 2 particles.
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Quantum criticality as a resource for quantum estimation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider quantum critical systems as a resource in quantum estimation and derive the ultimate quantum limits to the precision of any estimator of the coupling parameters of a quantum phase transition.
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Covariance, subspace, and intrinsic Crame/spl acute/r-Rao bounds

TL;DR: It is seen that the SVD-based method yields accuracies very close to the Crame/spl acute/r-Rao bound, establishing that the principal invariant subspace of a random sample provides an excellent estimator of an unknown subspace.
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Optical phase estimation in the presence of phase diffusion.

TL;DR: This work addresses the estimation of phase in the presence of phase diffusion and evaluates the ultimate quantum limits to precision for phase-shifted Gaussian states and finds that homodyne detection is a nearly optimal detection scheme in the limit of very small and large noise.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geometrothermodynamics of black holes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reformulated the thermodynamics of black holes in the context of geometrothermodynamics and showed that they are invariant with respect to Legendre transformations.
References
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Quantum detection and estimation theory

TL;DR: In this article, the optimum procedure for choosing between two hypotheses, and an approximate procedure valid at small signal-to-noise ratios and called threshold detection, are presented, and a quantum counterpart of the Cramer-Rao inequality of conventional statistics sets a lower bound to the mean-square errors of such estimates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical distance and the geometry of quantum states

TL;DR: By finding measurements that optimally resolve neighboring quantum states, this work uses statistical distinguishability to define a natural Riemannian metric on the space of quantum-mechanical density operators and to formulate uncertainty principles that are more general and more stringent than standard uncertainty principles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Probabilistic and Statistical Aspects of Quantum Theory

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a statistical model of quantum theory, including symmetry groups in quantum mechanics, and unbiased measurement and optimality of Gaussian states, and supplement - Statistical Structure of Quantum Theory and Hidden Variables.
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