THE GEOMETRY OF QUANTUM COMPUTATION
Details
Publication Year 2008-11-01,Volume 8,Issue #10,Page 861-899
Journal Title
QUANTUM INFORMATION & COMPUTATION
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Determining the quantum circuit complexity of a unitary operation is closely related to the problem of finding minimal length paths in a particular curved geometry [Nielsen et at, Science 311, 1133-1135 (2006)]. This paper investigates many of the basic geometric objects associated to this space, including the Levi-Civita connection, the geodesic equation, the curvature, and the Jacobi equation. We show that the optimal Hamiltonian evolution for synthesis of a desired unitary necessarily obeys a simple universal geodesic equation. As a consequence, once the initial value of the Hamiltonian is set, subsequent changes to the Hamiltonian are completely determined by the geodesic equation. We develop many analytic solutions to the geodesic equation, and a set of invariants that completely determine the geodesics. We investigate the problem of finding minimal geodesics through a desired unitary, U, and develop a procedure which allows us to deform the (known) geodesics of a simple and well understood metric to the geodesics of the metric of interest in quantum computation. This deformation procedure is illustrated using some three-qubit numerical examples. We study the computational complexity of evaluating distances on Riemmanian manifolds, and show that no efficient classical algorithm for this problem exists, subject to the assumption that good pseudorandom generators exist. Finally, we develop a canonical extension procedure for unitary operations which allows ancilla cubits to be incorporated into the geometric approach to quantum computing.
Publisher
RINTON PRESS, INC
Keywords
ALGORITHMS; COMPUTER; SYSTEMS
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2008-11-01 12:00:00
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