Graeme Smith, John A. Smolin
ITW 2008
Communication over a noisy quantum channel introduces errors in the transmission that must be corrected. A fundamental bound on quantum error correction is the quantum capacity, which quantifies the amount of quantum data that can be protected. We show theoretically that two quantum channels, each with a transmission capacity of zero, can have a nonzero capacity when used together. This unveils a rich structure in the theory of quantum communications, implying that the quantum capacity does not completely specify a channel's ability to transmit quantum information.
Graeme Smith, John A. Smolin
ITW 2008
Jianxin Chen, Toby S. Cubitt, et al.
ISIT 2010
Peter W. Shor, Graeme Smith, et al.
IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory
Andrew W. Cross, Ke Li, et al.
Physical Review Letters