Linear Optical Schemes to Postselect High-Dimensional Dicke States
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 12:04 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Linear optical schemes using ancillary photons can postselect high-dimensional symmetric qudit Dicke states with success probabilities exceeding the bound for schemes without ancillas.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The authors introduce linear optical schemes for postselecting symmetric qudit Dicke states, both with and without ancillary photons, and prove that the use of ancillary photons enables success probabilities exceeding the upper bound applicable to non-ancillary schemes, while the schemes are general enough to cover a wide range of interference setups.
What carries the argument
A family of postselection schemes based on linear optical interference of photons, where ancillary photons add degrees of freedom that raise the probability of detecting the desired symmetric state pattern.
If this is right
- Multiple distinct linear optical arrangements become available for generating the same target Dicke state.
- Success rates for postselecting these multipartite entangled states can be raised beyond previously established limits.
- Dicke states become more accessible as resources for quantum communication protocols and variational quantum algorithms.
- The approach extends to a broad class of interference setups without requiring specialized hardware beyond standard linear optics.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Ancillary photons may serve as a general tactic for raising postselection efficiencies in other photonic entanglement generation tasks.
- The number of ancillary photons could be optimized per state dimension to balance success rate against experimental overhead.
- Similar postselection boosts might apply to related symmetric states used in quantum error correction or distributed sensing.
Load-bearing premise
The linear optical interference and postselection process can be modeled and implemented with ideal unitary transformations and perfect photon indistinguishability, without accounting for realistic losses or mode mismatches that would degrade the postselected state.
What would settle it
Measure the success probability in an experimental realization of one of the ancillary-photon schemes and check whether it exceeds the calculated upper bound for the matching no-ancilla scheme under the same photon number and dimension.
Figures
read the original abstract
Multipartite entanglement is an essential quantum resource for various distributed quantum applications. One promising method for preparing multipartite entanglement is to interfere independent photons at linear optical interference setups. While heralding the successful interference and thereby the state generation is often costly, postselecting entangled states provides an achievable alternative in this framework. We introduce a family of interference schemes for postselecting symmetric qudit Dicke states, useful resources in quantum communication and variational quantum computing. We present schemes with and without ancillary photons and show that using ancillary photons can exceed the upper bound on the success probability of schemes without ancillary photons. Our results accommodate a wide range of linear optical schemes, providing multiple viable approaches for postselecting Dicke states.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript introduces a family of linear-optical interference schemes for postselecting symmetric qudit Dicke states. It presents both ancilla-free and ancilla-assisted constructions and claims that ancillary photons enable success probabilities exceeding an upper bound that holds for all ancilla-free schemes, all within the ideal model of unitary linear optics and perfect photon indistinguishability.
Significance. If the bound derivation and explicit constructions hold, the work supplies concrete, higher-efficiency routes to multipartite entanglement generation on a practical platform. This is relevant for quantum communication protocols and variational algorithms that rely on symmetric Dicke states, and the uniform ideal-model comparison provides a clear benchmark.
major comments (2)
- [Section presenting the ancilla-free bound] The derivation of the upper bound on success probability for ancilla-free schemes must be shown explicitly (including the precise assumptions on the number of photons, modes, and postselection conditions) so that the claim of generality can be verified; this is load-bearing for the central comparative result.
- [Section on ancilla-assisted constructions] The ancilla-assisted schemes require explicit unitary matrices or beam-splitter networks together with the postselection probability calculation to confirm they exceed the bound; without these, the numerical improvement cannot be independently checked.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract and introduction] Clarify the range of qudit dimensions d and total photon numbers for which the schemes and bound apply.
- [Discussion or conclusion] Add a brief discussion of how the ideal-model results translate to realistic conditions (losses, distinguishability) even if only qualitatively.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments. We address each major point below and will revise the manuscript to incorporate the requested explicit details.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Section presenting the ancilla-free bound] The derivation of the upper bound on success probability for ancilla-free schemes must be shown explicitly (including the precise assumptions on the number of photons, modes, and postselection conditions) so that the claim of generality can be verified; this is load-bearing for the central comparative result.
Authors: We agree that an explicit derivation is necessary for independent verification. In the revised manuscript we will expand the relevant section with a complete step-by-step derivation of the upper bound, explicitly stating the assumptions on photon number, mode count, and postselection conditions under which the bound holds for all ancilla-free linear-optical schemes. revision: yes
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Referee: [Section on ancilla-assisted constructions] The ancilla-assisted schemes require explicit unitary matrices or beam-splitter networks together with the postselection probability calculation to confirm they exceed the bound; without these, the numerical improvement cannot be independently checked.
Authors: We acknowledge that the current presentation lacks sufficient explicit detail for verification. In the revised manuscript we will supply the explicit unitary matrices (or equivalent beam-splitter decompositions) for each ancilla-assisted construction, together with the full postselection probability calculations that demonstrate the improvement over the ancilla-free bound. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper derives an upper bound on postselection success probability for ancilla-free linear-optical schemes and explicitly constructs ancilla-assisted schemes whose probabilities exceed that bound. Both the bound and the constructions are obtained from direct calculation of unitary interference and postselection probabilities in the ideal model of perfect photon indistinguishability; no parameters are fitted to data and then relabeled as predictions, no result is defined in terms of itself, and no load-bearing premise reduces to a self-citation. The comparison therefore remains internal to a single, externally verifiable mathematical framework and does not collapse by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Linear optical elements implement unitary transformations on photon Fock states according to standard quantum optics.
Reference graph
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1|{z} k1 . . .(d−1). . .(d−1)| {z } kd−1 ⟩, (1) whereS {k} N denotes the symmetric group that permutes the order of qudit states without multiple counting. Dicke states have been shown to be useful in different applications. First, Dicke states are a natural benchmark for studying entanglement under particle loss, since their permutation symmetry and fixe...
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1 √ N K d−1Y j=1 1p kj!( NX mj =1 ˆb† mj ,j)kj |vac⟩, (18) where ˆb† j,s and ˆs† s denote particles in theNoutput system modes and one ancillary mode respectively. We postselect the cases when each mode in the main system receives exactly one particle and the ancillary mode receivesKparticles. Then the final state is given 5 by αN−K βKQd−1 j=1 kj! √ N KqQ...
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1|{z} k1 ⟩,(29) withk 0/1 photons in|0/1⟩,N=k 0 +k 1, andK=k 1
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Without Ancillary Photons As discussed in Section III B, sending all photons into the same mode of a symmetric multiport beam splitter, one can postselect a symmetric qubit Dicke state with a success probability ofp N,{k0,k1} =N!/N N [see Eq. (10)]. However, when starting from single-photon input states, this success probability will decrease. Note that t...
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(28)]: ˜p(max) {k},ancilla = N!k 1! k0! kk0 0 kk1 1 N N+2k 1 k1! kk1 1 N.(32)
With Ancillary Photons Starting from single-photon input states, the linear op- tical scheme with ancillary photons [see Section IV] yields the following success probability for qubits [see Eq. (28)]: ˜p(max) {k},ancilla = N!k 1! k0! kk0 0 kk1 1 N N+2k 1 k1! kk1 1 N.(32)
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(30) and (31)], we plot the respective probabilities for differentk 1 ≤k 0 in Fig
Comparison To compare this result with the linear optical schemes without using ancillary photons [see Eqs. (30) and (31)], we plot the respective probabilities for differentk 1 ≤k 0 in Fig. 4a). Furthermore, we plot contour plots of the differences between the schemes in Fig. 5a) for up to k1 = 20. We find that forN≲(2.411±0.005)k 1 + (0.699±0.056) the a...
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2|{z} k2 ⟩,(33) withk 0/1/2 photons in|0/1/2⟩,N=k 0 +k 1 +k 2, and K=k 1 +k 2
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Without Ancillary Photons Again, by sending allNphotons into the same mode of a symmetricN-port splitter, one can postselect a sym- metric qutrit Dicke state with a success probability of pN,{k0,k1,k2} =N!/N N [see Eq. (10)]. The reduced suc- cess probabilities starting from single photon input states are given by [see Eq. (14)] ˜pN,{k} = N!k 0!k1!k2! N 2...
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With Ancillary Photons Starting from single-photon input states, the linear op- tical scheme for qutrits and with ancillary photons [see Section IV] gives [see Eq. (28)]: ˜p(max) {k},ancilla = N!(k 1 +k 2)! k0! kk0 0 (k1 +k 2)k1+k2 N N+2(k 1+k2) k1!k2! kk1 1 kk2 2 N. (36)
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Comparison To compare this result with the schemes for post- selecting qutrit Dicke states without ancillas, we plot the corresponding probabilities for differentk 1 =k 2 in Fig. 4b). Additionally, in Fig. 5b), we plot the contour plots of the differences of the different schemes for up to k1 =k 2 = 10. Similarly to the qubit case, we find that for smallN...
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discussion (0)
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