Abstract

Until now we have dealt almost solely with the dynamics of closed quantum systems, that is, with quantum systems that do not suffer any unwanted interactions with the outside world. Although fascinating conclusions can be drawn about the information processing tasks which may be accomplished in principle in such ideal systems, these observations are tempered by the fact that in the real world there are no perfectly closed systems, except perhaps the universe as a whole. Real systems suffer from unwanted interactions with the outside world. These unwanted interactions show up as noise in quantum information processing systems. We need to understand and control such noise processes in order to build useful quantum information processing systems. This is a central topic of the third part of this book, which begins in this chapter with the description of the quantum operations formalism , a powerful set of tools enabling us to describe quantum noise and the behavior of open quantum systems. What is the distinction between an open and a closed system? A swinging pendulum like that found in some mechanical clocks can be a nearly ideal closed system. A pendulum interacts only very slightly with the rest of the world – its environment – mainly through friction. However, to properly describe the full dynamics of the pendulum and why it eventually ceases to move one must take into account the damping effects of air friction and imperfections in the suspension mechanism of the pendulum.

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