Real-time calibration of coherent-state receivers: learning by trial and
error
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2001.10283v1
- Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2020 11:56:20 GMT
- Title: Real-time calibration of coherent-state receivers: learning by trial and
error
- Authors: M. Bilkis, M. Rosati, R. Morral Yepes and J. Calsamiglia
- Abstract summary: We show that reinforcement learning protocols allow an agent to learn near-optimal coherent-state receivers.
Our results show that RL techniques are suitable for on-line control of quantum receivers and can be employed for long-distance communications.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: The optimal discrimination of coherent states of light with current
technology is a key problem in classical and quantum communication, whose
solution would enable the realization of efficient receivers for long-distance
communications in free-space and optical fiber channels. In this article, we
show that reinforcement learning (RL) protocols allow an agent to learn
near-optimal coherent-state receivers made of passive linear optics,
photodetectors and classical adaptive control. Each agent is trained and tested
in real time over several runs of independent discrimination experiments and
has no knowledge about the energy of the states nor the receiver setup nor the
quantum-mechanical laws governing the experiments. Based exclusively on the
observed photodetector outcomes, the agent adaptively chooses among a set of ~3
10^3 possible receiver setups, and obtains a reward at the end of each
experiment if its guess is correct. At variance with previous applications of
RL in quantum physics, the information gathered in each run is intrinsically
stochastic and thus insufficient to evaluate exactly the performance of the
chosen receiver. Nevertheless, we present families of agents that: (i) discover
a receiver beating the best Gaussian receiver after ~3 10^2 experiments; (ii)
surpass the cumulative reward of the best Gaussian receiver after ~10^3
experiments; (iii) simultaneously discover a near-optimal receiver and attain
its cumulative reward after ~10^5 experiments. Our results show that RL
techniques are suitable for on-line control of quantum receivers and can be
employed for long-distance communications over potentially unknown channels.
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