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Atomic and Laser Physics
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Prof Vlatko Vedral FInstP

Professor of Quantum Information Science

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • Frontiers of quantum physics
vlatko.vedral@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72389
Clarendon Laboratory, room 241.8
  • About
  • Publications

Device-Independent Tests of Quantum Measurements.

Physical review letters 118:25 (2017) 250501-250501

Authors:

Michele Dall'Arno, Sarah Brandsen, Francesco Buscemi, Vlatko Vedral

Abstract:

We consider the problem of characterizing the set of input-output correlations that can be generated by an arbitrarily given quantum measurement. Our main result is to provide a closed-form, full characterization of such a set for any qubit measurement, and to discuss its geometrical interpretation. As applications, we further specify our results to the cases of real and complex symmetric, informationally complete measurements and mutually unbiased bases of a qubit, in the presence of isotropic noise. Our results provide the optimal device-independent tests of quantum measurements.
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Fluctuation Theorem for Arbitrary Quantum Bipartite Systems

(2017)

Authors:

Jung Jun Park, Sang Wook Kim, Vlatko Vedral
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Thermodynamics of complexity and pattern manipulation.

Physical review. E 95:4-1 (2017) 042140-042140

Authors:

Andrew JP Garner, Jayne Thompson, Vlatko Vedral, Mile Gu

Abstract:

Many organisms capitalize on their ability to predict the environment to maximize available free energy and reinvest this energy to create new complex structures. This functionality relies on the manipulation of patterns-temporally ordered sequences of data. Here, we propose a framework to describe pattern manipulators-devices that convert thermodynamic work to patterns or vice versa-and use them to build a "pattern engine" that facilitates a thermodynamic cycle of pattern creation and consumption. We show that the least heat dissipation is achieved by the provably simplest devices, the ones that exhibit desired operational behavior while maintaining the least internal memory. We derive the ultimate limits of this heat dissipation and show that it is generally nonzero and connected with the pattern's intrinsic crypticity-a complexity theoretic quantity that captures the puzzling difference between the amount of information the pattern's past behavior reveals about its future and the amount one needs to communicate about this past to optimally predict the future.
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Operational one-to-one mapping between coherence and entanglement measures

(2017)

Authors:

Huangjun Zhu, Zhihao Ma, Zhu Cao, Shao-Ming Fei, Vlatko Vedral
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Witnessing quantumness of a system by observing only its classical features

(2017)

Authors:

Chiara Marletto, Vlatko Vedral
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