Port-Based State Preparation and Applications

Abstract

We introduce Port-Based State Preparation (PBSP), a teleportation task where Alice holds a complete classical description of the target state and Bob's correction operations are restricted to only tracing out registers. We show a protocol that implements PBSP with error decreasing exponentially in the number of ports, in contrast to the polynomial trade-off for the related task of Port-Based Teleportation, and we prove that this is optimal when a maximally entangled resource state is used. As an application, we introduce approximate Universal Programmable Hybrid Processors (UPHP). Here the goal is to encode a unitary as a quantum state, and the UPHP can apply this unitary to a quantum state when knowing its classical description. We give a construction that needs strictly less memory in terms of dimension than the optimal approximate Universal Programmable Quantum Processor achieving the same error. Additionally, we provide lower bounds for the optimal trade-off between memory and error of UPHPs.

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