Limitations on quantum information
Despite sharing a common underlying mathematical structure, quantum and classical information have key differences. As a result, there are many examples of tasks that quantum information allows but classical information does not.
Before exploring some of these examples, however, we'll take note of some important limitations on quantum information. Understanding things quantum information can't do helps us identify the things it can do.
Irrelevance of global phases
The first limitation we'll cover — which is really more of a slight degeneracy in the way that quantum states are represented by quantum state vectors, as opposed to an actual limitation — concerns the notion of a global phase.
What we mean by a global phase is this. Let and be unit vectors representing quantum states of some system, and suppose that there exists a complex number on the unit circle, meaning that or alternatively for some real number such that
The vectors and are then said to differ by a global phase. We also sometimes refer to as a global phase, although this is context-dependent; any number on the unit circle can be thought of as a global phase when multiplied to a unit vector.
Consider what happens when a system is in one of the two quantum states and and the system undergoes a standard basis measurement. In the first case, in which the system is in the state the probability of measuring any given classical state is
In the second case, in which the system is in the state the probability of measuring any classical state is
because That is, the probability of an outcome appearing is the same for both states.
Now consider what happens when we apply an arbitrary unitary operation to both states. In the first case, in which the initial state is the state becomes
and in the second case, in which the initial state is it becomes
That is, the two resulting states still differ by the same global phase
Consequently, two quantum states and that differ by a global phase are completely indistinguishable; no matter what operation, or sequence of operations, we apply to the two states, they will always differ by a global phase, and performing a standard basis measurement will produce outcomes with precisely the same probabilities as the other. For this reason, two quantum state vectors that differ by a global phase are considered to be equivalent, and are effectively viewed as being the same state.
For example, the quantum states
differ by a global phase (which is in this example), and are therefore considered to be the same state.
On the other hand, the quantum states
do not differ by a global phase. Although the only difference between the two states is that a plus sign turns into a minus sign, this is not a global phase difference, it is a relative phase difference because it does not affect every vector entry, but only a proper subset of the entries. This is consistent with what we have already observed previously, which is that the states and can be discriminated perfectly. In particular, performing a Hadamard operation and then measuring yields outcome probabilities as follows:
No-cloning theorem
The no-cloning theorem shows it is impossible to create a perfect copy of an unknown quantum state.
That is, there is no way to initialize the system (to any state