Abstract:
Research into quantum information and quantum computation has raised many fundamental
questions. To make progress, a critical understanding of the fundamental aspects
has become inevitable. Here we investigate, both experimentally and theoretically, some
of the fundamental aspects of quantum mechanics viz., quantum contextuality, quantum
measurement, quantum Fisher information, no-signaling principle, and quantum
nonlocality.
Using a three qubit NMR register, we show that, quantum harmonic oscillator states
exhibits quantum contextuality (i.e., no reality before measurement; in other words,
we cannot assign values to observables even before measurement; measurement creates
reality). Using a four qubit NMR register, we show that, NMR spectrometer is a
Luders measuring device (which preserves superposition in the degenerate subspace
corresponding to a degenerate observable being measured). Using a four qubit NMR star
topology register (i.e., one central target qubit surrounded by three ancillary qubits),
we show that, ancillary qubits pre-correlated with central target qubit, can amplify
quantum Fisher information corresponding to the central target qubit (i.e., increases
precision in unknown parameter estimation corresponding to the central target qubit).
Density matrix description is based on Kolmogorov's modern axiomatic probability measure
theory of quantum random phenomena. However, in Kolmogorov's schema, a priori
assumption of a constant value for the probability of a single random event is a purely
mathematical quantity which is not motivated by experiment. Consequently, motivated
by what we actually observe in experiments, we propose an alternative mathematical
model wherein a priori probability measure is dropped completely and instead a posteriori limit-supremum of relative frequency is considered. We call the resulting theoretical
model as the frequentist-inspired quantum mechanics wherein we consider the unknown quantum states path by path. Then we show that within the frequentist-inspired quantum
mechanics, physically different ensembles described by the same density matrix are
distinguishable via content dependent fluctuations.
Finally we show that, it is possible to violate Bell's inequality beyond Tsirelson bound
by introducing context dependent unitary evolutions. Correct context dependency can
be achieved by either post-selection or signaling. This leads to a more efficient quantum
key distribution protocol.