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This new edition of a well-received textbook provides a concise
introduction to both the theoretical and experimental aspects of
quantum information at the graduate level. While the previous
edition focused on theory, the book now incorporates discussions of
experimental platforms. Several chapters on experimental
implementations of quantum information protocols have been added:
implementations using neutral atoms, trapped ions, optics, and
solidstate systems are each presented in its own chapter. Previous
chapters on entanglement, quantum measurements, quantum dynamics,
quantum cryptography, and quantum algorithms have been thoroughly
updated, and new additions include chapters on the stabilizer
formalism and the Gottesman-Knill theorem as well as aspects of
classical and quantum information theory. To facilitate learning,
each chapter starts with a clear motivation to the topic and closes
with exercises and a recommended reading list. Quantum Information
Processing: Theory and Implementation will be essential to graduate
students studying quantum information as well as and researchers in
other areas of physics who wish to gain knowledge in the field.
Introduction to the Theory of Quantum Information Processing
provides the material for a one-semester graduate level course on
quantum information theory and quantum computing for students who
have had a one-year graduate course in quantum mechanics. Many
standard subjects are treated, such as density matrices,
entanglement, quantum maps, quantum cryptography, and quantum
codes. Also included are discussions of quantum machines and
quantum walks. In addition, the book provides detailed treatments
of several underlying fundamental principles of quantum theory,
such as quantum measurements, the no-cloning and no-signaling
theorems, and their consequences. Problems of various levels of
difficulty supplement the text, with the most challenging problems
bringing the reader to the forefront of active research. This book
provides a compact introduction to the fascinating and rapidly
evolving interdisciplinary field of quantum information theory, and
it prepares the reader for doing active research in this area.
This new edition of a well-received textbook provides a concise
introduction to both the theoretical and experimental aspects of
quantum information at the graduate level. While the previous
edition focused on theory, the book now incorporates discussions of
experimental platforms. Several chapters on experimental
implementations of quantum information protocols have been added:
implementations using neutral atoms, trapped ions, optics, and
solidstate systems are each presented in its own chapter. Previous
chapters on entanglement, quantum measurements, quantum dynamics,
quantum cryptography, and quantum algorithms have been thoroughly
updated, and new additions include chapters on the stabilizer
formalism and the Gottesman-Knill theorem as well as aspects of
classical and quantum information theory. To facilitate learning,
each chapter starts with a clear motivation to the topic and closes
with exercises and a recommended reading list. Quantum Information
Processing: Theory and Implementation will be essential to graduate
students studying quantum information as well as and researchers in
other areas of physics who wish to gain knowledge in the field.
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