Physics:Quantum Amplitude damping

From HandWiki Test
← Previous : Kraus operators
Next : Phase damping →


Amplitude damping is a Book I topic in the Quantum Collection. It is a quantum noise process that models energy relaxation from an excited state to a lower-energy state. In a qubit, amplitude damping describes processes such as spontaneous emission, photon loss, or decay from

Overview

Placeholder: describe amplitude damping as a quantum noise process in which excitation is lost to an environment.

Key ideas

Placeholder: cover relaxation, photon loss, spontaneous emission, qubit noise, open-system dynamics.

Relaxation process

Placeholder: develop this section with definitions, examples, formulas, and links to related Quantum Collection pages.

Qubit channel

Placeholder: develop this section with definitions, examples, formulas, and links to related Quantum Collection pages.

Physical examples

Placeholder: develop this section with definitions, examples, formulas, and links to related Quantum Collection pages.

Relation to decoherence

Placeholder: develop this section with definitions, examples, formulas, and links to related Quantum Collection pages.

See also

Table of contents (217 articles)

Index

Full contents

References


Author: Harold Foppele


Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Amplitude damping