Search results for "Quantum algorithm"

showing 10 items of 103 documents

Quantum Random Walks – New Method for Designing Quantum Algorithms

2008

Quantum walks are quantum counterparts of random walks. In the last 5 years, they have become one of main methods of designing quantum algorithms. Quantum walk based algorithms include element distinctness, spatial search, quantum speedup of Markov chains, evaluation of Boolean formulas and search on "glued trees" graph. In this talk, I will describe the quantum walk method for designing search algorithms and show several of its applications.

Discrete mathematicsTheoretical computer scienceHeterogeneous random walk in one dimensionQuantum annealingTheoryofComputation_GENERALRandom walkMathematics::ProbabilitySearch algorithmComputerSystemsOrganization_MISCELLANEOUSQuantum phase estimation algorithmQuantum algorithmQuantum walkQuantum computerMathematics
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Probabilities to Accept Languages by Quantum Finite Automata

1999

We construct a hierarchy of regular languages such that the current language in the hierarchy can be accepted by 1-way quantum finite automata with a probability smaller than the corresponding probability for the preceding language in the hierarchy. These probabilities converge to 1/2.

Discrete mathematicsTheoretical computer scienceNested wordFinite-state machineHierarchy (mathematics)Computer scienceComputer Science::Computation and Language (Computational Linguistics and Natural Language and Speech Processing)Turing machinesymbols.namesakeNonlinear Sciences::Exactly Solvable and Integrable SystemsRegular languageProbabilistic automatonAnalytical hierarchysymbolsComputer Science::Programming LanguagesQuantum finite automataQuantum algorithmNondeterministic finite automaton
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Monotonically convergent optimal control theory of quantum systems under a nonlinear interaction with the control field

2008

We consider the optimal control of quantum systems interacting non-linearly with an electromagnetic field. We propose new monotonically convergent algorithms to solve the optimal equations. The monotonic behavior of the algorithm is ensured by a non-standard choice of the cost which is not quadratic in the field. These algorithms can be constructed for pure and mixed-state quantum systems. The efficiency of the method is shown numerically on molecular orientation with a non-linearity of order 3 in the field. Discretizing the amplitude and the phase of the Fourier transform of the optimal field, we show that the optimal solution can be well-approximated by pulses that could be implemented ex…

Electromagnetic fieldPhysicsQuantum opticsQuantum Physics[ PHYS.QPHY ] Physics [physics]/Quantum Physics [quant-ph]Field (physics)FOS: Physical sciencesMonotonic function[ MATH.MATH-NA ] Mathematics [math]/Numerical Analysis [math.NA][MATH.MATH-NA] Mathematics [math]/Numerical Analysis [math.NA]Linear-quadratic-Gaussian controlOptimal control01 natural sciencesAtomic and Molecular Physics and Optics010305 fluids & plasmasNonlinear system[PHYS.QPHY]Physics [physics]/Quantum Physics [quant-ph]0103 physical sciencesApplied mathematicsQuantum algorithmQuantum Physics (quant-ph)010306 general physics[PHYS.QPHY] Physics [physics]/Quantum Physics [quant-ph][MATH.MATH-NA]Mathematics [math]/Numerical Analysis [math.NA]ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSPhysical Review A
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Molecular spins for quantum computation

2019

Spins in solids or in molecules possess discrete energy levels, and the associated quantum states can be tuned and coherently manipulated by means of external electromagnetic fields. Spins therefore provide one of the simplest platforms to encode a quantum bit (qubit), the elementary unit of future quantum computers. Performing any useful computation demands much more than realizing a robust qubit—one also needs a large number of qubits and a reliable manner with which to integrate them into a complex circuitry that can store and process information and implement quantum algorithms. This ‘scalability’ is arguably one of the challenges for which a chemistry-based bottom-up approach is best-s…

Electromagnetic fieldSpins010405 organic chemistryChemistryGeneral Chemical EngineeringComputationQuàntums Teoria delsGeneral Chemistry010402 general chemistryTopology01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesQuantum stateQubitQuantum algorithmCompostos de coordinacióQuantumQuantum computerNature Chemistry
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Optimal one-shot quantum algorithm for EQUALITY and AND

2017

We study the computation complexity of Boolean functions in the quantum black box model. In this model our task is to compute a function $f:\{0,1\}\to\{0,1\}$ on an input $x\in\{0,1\}^n$ that can be accessed by querying the black box. Quantum algorithms are inherently probabilistic; we are interested in the lowest possible probability that the algorithm outputs incorrect answer (the error probability) for a fixed number of queries. We show that the lowest possible error probability for $AND_n$ and $EQUALITY_{n+1}$ is $1/2-n/(n^2+1)$.

FOS: Computer and information sciencesDiscrete mathematicsOne shotQuantum PhysicsGeneral Computer ScienceProbabilistic logicFOS: Physical sciencesFunction (mathematics)Computational Complexity (cs.CC)Computer Science - Computational ComplexityProbability of errorComputation complexityQuantum algorithmQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Boolean functionQuantumMathematics
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Separations in Query Complexity Based on Pointer Functions

2015

In 1986, Saks and Wigderson conjectured that the largest separation between deterministic and zero-error randomized query complexity for a total boolean function is given by the function $f$ on $n=2^k$ bits defined by a complete binary tree of NAND gates of depth $k$, which achieves $R_0(f) = O(D(f)^{0.7537\ldots})$. We show this is false by giving an example of a total boolean function $f$ on $n$ bits whose deterministic query complexity is $\Omega(n/\log(n))$ while its zero-error randomized query complexity is $\tilde O(\sqrt{n})$. We further show that the quantum query complexity of the same function is $\tilde O(n^{1/4})$, giving the first example of a total function with a super-quadra…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesFOS: Physical sciences0102 computer and information sciencesComputational Complexity (cs.CC)01 natural sciencesCombinatoricsArtificial Intelligence0103 physical sciences0101 mathematics010306 general physicsCommunication complexityBoolean functionQuantumMathematicsDiscrete mathematicsQuantum PhysicsBinary tree010102 general mathematicsNAND logicRandomized algorithmComputer Science - Computational ComplexityHardware and ArchitectureControl and Systems Engineering010201 computation theory & mathematicsIndependent setPointer (computer programming)Quantum algorithmQuantum Physics (quant-ph)SoftwareInformation Systems
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Quantum lower bound for inverting a permutation with advice

2014

Given a random permutation $f: [N] \to [N]$ as a black box and $y \in [N]$, we want to output $x = f^{-1}(y)$. Supplementary to our input, we are given classical advice in the form of a pre-computed data structure; this advice can depend on the permutation but \emph{not} on the input $y$. Classically, there is a data structure of size $\tilde{O}(S)$ and an algorithm that with the help of the data structure, given $f(x)$, can invert $f$ in time $\tilde{O}(T)$, for every choice of parameters $S$, $T$, such that $S\cdot T \ge N$. We prove a quantum lower bound of $T^2\cdot S \ge \tilde{\Omega}(\epsilon N)$ for quantum algorithms that invert a random permutation $f$ on an $\epsilon$ fraction of…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesNuclear and High Energy PhysicsComputer Science - Cryptography and SecurityGeneral Physics and AstronomyFOS: Physical sciencesOne-way functionComputational Complexity (cs.CC)Upper and lower boundsTheoretical Computer ScienceCyclic permutationCombinatoricsPermutationMathematical PhysicsMathematicsDiscrete mathematicsQuantum PhysicsBit-reversal permutationStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsRandom permutationComputer Science - Computational ComplexityComputational Theory and MathematicsQuantum algorithmQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Advice (complexity)Cryptography and Security (cs.CR)MathematicsofComputing_DISCRETEMATHEMATICS
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Classical and Quantum Annealing in the Median of Three Satisfiability

2011

We determine the classical and quantum complexities of a specific ensemble of three-satisfiability problems with a unique satisfying assignment for up to N = 100 and 80 variables, respectively. In the classical limit, we employ generalized ensemble techniques and measure the time that a Markovian Monte Carlo process spends in searching classical ground states. In the quantum limit, we determine the maximum finite correlation length along a quantum adiabatic trajectory determined by the linear sweep of the adiabatic control parameter in the Hamiltonian composed of the problem Hamiltonian and the constant transverse field Hamiltonian. In the median of our ensemble, both complexities diverge e…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesPolynomialComputational complexity theoryQuantum dynamicsFOS: Physical sciencesComputational Complexity (cs.CC)Classical limitClassical capacityQuantum mechanicsddc:530Statistical physicsALGORITHMAmplitude damping channelQuantumQuantum fluctuationCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsMathematicsPhysicsQuantum PhysicsStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Stochastic processQuantum annealingAdiabatic quantum computationAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsSatisfiabilityJComputer Science - Computational ComplexityComputerSystemsOrganization_MISCELLANEOUSQuantum algorithmPHASE-TRANSITIONSQuantum dissipationQuantum Physics (quant-ph)
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Quadratic speedup for finding marked vertices by quantum walks

2020

A quantum walk algorithm can detect the presence of a marked vertex on a graph quadratically faster than the corresponding random walk algorithm (Szegedy, FOCS 2004). However, quantum algorithms that actually find a marked element quadratically faster than a classical random walk were only known for the special case when the marked set consists of just a single vertex, or in the case of some specific graphs. We present a new quantum algorithm for finding a marked vertex in any graph, with any set of marked vertices, that is (up to a log factor) quadratically faster than the corresponding classical random walk.

FOS: Computer and information sciencesQuadratic growthQuantum PhysicsQuantum algorithmsSpeedupMarkov chainMarkov chainsProbability (math.PR)FOS: Physical sciencesRandom walkVertex (geometry)CombinatoricsQuadratic equationSearch by random walkQuantum searchComputer Science - Data Structures and AlgorithmsFOS: MathematicsData Structures and Algorithms (cs.DS)Quantum walkQuantum algorithmQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Mathematics - ProbabilityMathematicsQuantum walks
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Quantum Attacks on Classical Proof Systems - The Hardness of Quantum Rewinding

2014

Quantum zero-knowledge proofs and quantum proofs of knowledge are inherently difficult to analyze because their security analysis uses rewinding. Certain cases of quantum rewinding are handled by the results by Watrous (SIAM J Comput, 2009) and Unruh (Eurocrypt 2012), yet in general the problem remains elusive. We show that this is not only due to a lack of proof techniques: relative to an oracle, we show that classically secure proofs and proofs of knowledge are insecure in the quantum setting. More specifically, sigma-protocols, the Fiat-Shamir construction, and Fischlin's proof system are quantum insecure under assumptions that are sufficient for classical security. Additionally, we show…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesQuantum PhysicsQuantum networkComputer Science - Cryptography and SecurityTheoretical computer scienceFOS: Physical sciencesQuantum capacityQuantum cryptographyQuantum error correctionQuantum algorithmQuantum informationQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Cryptography and Security (cs.CR)Quantum computerQuantum complexity theoryMathematicsComputer Science::Cryptography and Security
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