Fidelity
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In this part of the lesson, we'll discuss the fidelity between quantum states, which is a measure of their similarity — or how much they "overlap."
Given two quantum state vectors, the fidelity between the pure states associated with these quantum state vectors equals the absolute value of the inner product between the quantum state vectors. This provides a basic way to measure their similarity: the result is a value between and with larger values indicating greater similarity. In particular, the value is zero for orthogonal states (by definition), while the value is for states equivalent up to a global phase.
Intuitively speaking, the fidelity can be seen as an extension of this basic measure of similarity, from quantum state vectors to density matrices.
Definition of fidelity
It's fitting to begin with a definition of fidelity. At first glance, the definition that follows might look unusual or mysterious, and perhaps not easy to work with. The function it defines, however, turns out to have many interesting properties and multiple alternative formulations, making it much nicer to work with than it may initially appear.
To make sense of the formula in the definition, notice first that is a positive semidefinite matrix:
for Like all positive semidefinite matrices, this positive semidefinite matrix has a unique positive semidefinite square root, the trace of which is the fidelity.
For every square matrix the eigenvalues of the two positive semidefinite matrices and are always the same, and hence the same is true for the square roots of these matrices. Choosing and using the fact that the trace of a square matrix is the sum of its eigenvalues, we find that
So, although it is not immediate from the definition, the fidelity is symmetric in its two arguments.