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      Replicating the benefits of closed timelike curves without breaking causality

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          Abstract

          In general relativity, closed timelike curves can break causality with remarkable and unsettling consequences. At the classical level, they induce causal paradoxes disturbing enough to motivate conjectures that explicitly prevent their existence. At the quantum level, resolving such paradoxes induce radical benefits - from cloning unknown quantum states to solving problems intractable to quantum computers. Instinctively, one expects these benefits to vanish if causality is respected. Here we show that in harnessing entanglement, we can efficiently solve NP-complete problems and clone arbitrary quantum states - even when all time-travelling systems are completely isolated from the past. Thus, the many defining benefits of closed timelike curves can still be harnessed, even when causality is preserved. Our results unveil the subtle interplay between entanglement and general relativity, and significantly improve the potential of probing the radical effects that may exist at the interface between relativity and quantum theory.

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          Most cited references20

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          Probability Inequalities for Sums of Bounded Random Variables

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            Optimal Cloning of Pure States

            R. Werner (1998)
            We construct the unique optimal quantum device for turning a finite number of d-level quantum systems in the same unknown pure state \sigma into M systems of the same kind, in an approximation of the M-fold tensor product of the state \sigma.
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              Quantum cloning

              , , (2005)
              The impossibility of perfectly copying (or cloning) an arbitrary quantum state is one of the basic rules governing the physics of quantum systems. The processes that perform the optimal approximate cloning have been found in many cases. These "quantum cloning machines" are important tools for studying a wide variety of tasks, e.g. state estimation and eavesdropping on quantum cryptography. This paper provides a comprehensive review of quantum cloning machines (both for discrete-dimensional and for continuous-variable quantum systems); in addition, it presents the role of cloning in quantum cryptography, the link between optimal cloning and light amplification via stimulated emission, and the experimental demonstrations of optimal quantum cloning.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                17 December 2014
                Article
                10.1038/npjqi.2015.7
                1412.5596
                f090d094-25d5-4f4f-bbec-4fc0666dc4a1

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                6 pages, 5 figures. Comments most welcome
                quant-ph gr-qc

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