Abstract

We construct a probabilistic quantum cloning machine by a general unitary-reduction operation. With a postselection of the measurement results, the machine yields faithful copies of the input states. It is shown that the states secretly chosen from a certain set $S\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}=\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}{|{\ensuremath{\Psi}}_{1}〉,|{\ensuremath{\Psi}}_{2}〉,\dots{},|{\ensuremath{\Psi}}_{n}〉}$ can be probabilistically cloned if and only if $|{\ensuremath{\Psi}}_{1}〉,|{\ensuremath{\Psi}}_{2}〉,\dots{},\mathrm{and}|{\ensuremath{\Psi}}_{n}〉$ are linearly independent. We derive the best possible cloning efficiencies. Probabilistic cloning has a close connection with the problem of identification of a set of states, which is a type of $n+1$ outcome measurement on $n$ linearly independent states. The optimal efficiencies for this type of measurement are obtained.

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