DocumentCode
42968
Title
Polar Codes for Classical-Quantum Channels
Author
Wilde, Mark M. ; Guha, Saikat
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput. Sci., McGill Univ., Montreal, QC, Canada
Volume
59
Issue
2
fYear
2013
fDate
Feb. 2013
Firstpage
1175
Lastpage
1187
Abstract
Holevo, Schumacher, and Westmoreland´s coding theorem guarantees the existence of codes that are capacity-achieving for the task of sending classical data over a channel with classical inputs and quantum outputs. Although they demonstrated the existence of such codes, their proof does not provide an explicit construction of codes for this task. The aim of this paper is to fill this gap by constructing near-explicit “polar” codes that are capacity-achieving. The codes exploit the channel polarization phenomenon observed by Arikan for the case of classical channels. Channel polarization is an effect in which one can synthesize a set of channels, by “channel combining” and “channel splitting,” in which a fraction of the synthesized channels are perfect for data transmission, while the other channels are completely useless for data transmission, with the good fraction equal to the capacity of the channel. The channel polarization effect then leads to a simple scheme for data transmission: send the information bits through the perfect channels and “frozen” bits through the useless ones. The main technical contributions of this paper are threefold. First, we leverage several known results from the quantum information literature to demonstrate that the channel polarization effect occurs for channels with classical inputs and quantum outputs. We then construct linear polar codes based on this effect, and the encoding complexity is O(NlogN), where N is the blocklength of the code. We also demonstrate that a quantum successive cancellation decoder works well, in the sense that the word error rate decays exponentially with the blocklength of the code. For this last result, we exploit Sen´s recent “noncommutative union bound” that holds for a sequence of projectors applied to a quantum state.
Keywords
channel coding; linear codes; quantum communication; quantum theory; Holevo coding theorem; Schumacher coding theorem; Westmoreland coding theorem; channel capacity; channel combining; channel polarization effect; channel splitting; classical quantum channel; data transmission; encoding complexity; linear polar codes; quantum information literature; quantum state; quantum successive cancellation decoder; synthesized channel; word error rate; Channel coding; Decoding; Quantum mechanics; Receivers; Reliability; Vectors; Channel combining; channel splitting; classical-quantum polar code; non-commutative union bound; quantum successive cancellation decoder;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9448
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TIT.2012.2218792
Filename
6302198
Link To Document