QUANTUM INFORMATION OMSP PAPER: Atomic, Optical, and Laser Physics)
Author(s): Stephen BARNETT (Author)
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication Date: May 28, 2009
Edition: 1st
Language: English
Print length: 316 pages
ISBN-10: 0198527632
ISBN-13: 9780198527633
Book Description
Quantum information – the subject – is a new and exciting area of science, which brings together physics, information theory, computer science and mathematics. Quantum Information -the book- is based on two successful lecture courses given to advanced undergraduate and beginning postgraduate students in physics. The intention is to introduce readers at this level to the fundamental, but offer rather simple, ideas behind ground-breaking developments including quantum cryptography, teleportation and quantum computing. The text is necessarily rather mathematical in style, but the mathematical nowhere allowed priority over the key physical ideas. The aim throughout was to be as complete and self-contained but to avoid, as far as possible, lengthy and formal mathematical proofs. Each of the eight chapters is followed by about forty exercise problems with which the reader can test their understanding and hone their skills. These will also provide a valuable resource to tutors and lectures.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Stephen Barnett’s Quantum Information is a concise and remarkably readable account of most of the developments in the field. His book touches on almost all aspects of quantum information and quantum computing, including communication and measurement theory, entanglement, and computing algorithms. An impressive book…The engaging introductory chapters, extensive problem sets, and exhaustive appendices result in a textbook highly recommended for a one-semester course on quantum information at the advanced undergraduate or graduate level.”–Physics Today
Book Description
Based on two successful lecture courses, Quantum Information introduces readers to the exciting ideas behind ground-breaking developments including quantum cryptography, teleportation and quantum computing.
About the Author
Stephen Barnett graduated with a BSc in physics from Imperial College London in 1982 and stayed at IC to study for his PhD under the supervision of Peter Knight, graduating in 1985. He held personal Research Fellowships at Imperial College, Harwell and Wolfson College Oxford and at Somerville College Oxford, where he taught Engineering Science. After a year as a Lecturer at Kings College London he moved to Strathclyde in 1991 as a Royal Society of Edinburgh/Scottish Office Education Department research Fellow. He was appointed as a Senior Lecturer and then Reader in 1994 before being promoted to Professor in 1996. He is best known for his work, with David Pegg, on the quantum phase operator, work for which he was awarded the Maxwell Medal and Prize by the Institute of Physics in 1994. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1996 and a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2006. He is currently a recipient of a Royal Society-Wolfson Merit Award and was awarded the James Scott Prize.