Remote State Preparation
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Quantum teleportation uses prior entanglement and forward classical communication to transmit one instance of an unknown quantum state. Remote state preparation (RSP) has the same goal, but the sender knows classically what state is to be transmitted. We show that the asymptotic classical communication cost of RSP is one bit per qubit - half that of teleportation - and becomes even less when transmitting part of a known entangled state. We explore the tradeoff between entanglement and classical communication required for RSP, and discuss RSP capacities of general quantum channels.
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Multicopy quantum state teleportation with application to storage and retrieval of quantum programs
Maximal success probability for multicopy teleportation without receiver correction is p(d,k)=k/[d(k-1+d)], attained by explicit protocol using group representation theory, with application to enhanced quantum program...
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