5,312 research outputs found
BosonSampling with Lost Photons
BosonSampling is an intermediate model of quantum computation where
linear-optical networks are used to solve sampling problems expected to be hard
for classical computers. Since these devices are not expected to be universal
for quantum computation, it remains an open question of whether any
error-correction techniques can be applied to them, and thus it is important to
investigate how robust the model is under natural experimental imperfections,
such as losses and imperfect control of parameters. Here we investigate the
complexity of BosonSampling under photon losses---more specifically, the case
where an unknown subset of the photons are randomly lost at the sources. We
show that, if out of photons are lost, then we cannot sample
classically from a distribution that is -close (in total
variation distance) to the ideal distribution, unless a
machine can estimate the permanents of Gaussian
matrices in time. In particular, if is constant, this implies
that simulating lossy BosonSampling is hard for a classical computer, under
exactly the same complexity assumption used for the original lossless case.Comment: 12 pages. v2: extended concluding sectio
Infinite Invariant Density Determines Statistics of Time Averages for Weak Chaos
Weakly chaotic non-linear maps with marginal fixed points have an infinite
invariant measure. Time averages of integrable and non-integrable observables
remain random even in the long time limit. Temporal averages of integrable
observables are described by the Aaronson-Darling-Kac theorem. We find the
distribution of time averages of non-integrable observables, for example the
time average position of the particle. We show how this distribution is related
to the infinite invariant density. We establish four identities between
amplitude ratios controlling the statistics of the problem.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Exchangeable measures for subshifts
Let \Om be a Borel subset of where is countable. A measure
is called exchangeable on \Om, if it is supported on \Om and is invariant
under every Borel automorphism of \Om which permutes at most finitely many
coordinates. De-Finetti's theorem characterizes these measures when \Om=S^\Bbb
N. We apply the ergodic theory of equivalence relations to study the case
\Om\neq S^\Bbb N, and obtain versions of this theorem when \Om is a
countable state Markov shift, and when \Om is the collection of beta
expansions of real numbers in (a non-Markovian constraint)
A Full Characterization of Quantum Advice
We prove the following surprising result: given any quantum state rho on n
qubits, there exists a local Hamiltonian H on poly(n) qubits (e.g., a sum of
two-qubit interactions), such that any ground state of H can be used to
simulate rho on all quantum circuits of fixed polynomial size. In terms of
complexity classes, this implies that BQP/qpoly is contained in QMA/poly, which
supersedes the previous result of Aaronson that BQP/qpoly is contained in
PP/poly. Indeed, we can exactly characterize quantum advice, as equivalent in
power to untrusted quantum advice combined with trusted classical advice.
Proving our main result requires combining a large number of previous tools --
including a result of Alon et al. on learning of real-valued concept classes, a
result of Aaronson on the learnability of quantum states, and a result of
Aharonov and Regev on "QMA+ super-verifiers" -- and also creating some new
ones. The main new tool is a so-called majority-certificates lemma, which is
closely related to boosting in machine learning, and which seems likely to find
independent applications. In its simplest version, this lemma says the
following. Given any set S of Boolean functions on n variables, any function f
in S can be expressed as the pointwise majority of m=O(n) functions f1,...,fm
in S, such that each fi is the unique function in S compatible with O(log|S|)
input/output constraints.Comment: We fixed two significant issues: 1. The definition of YQP machines
needed to be changed to preserve our results. The revised definition is more
natural and has the same intuitive interpretation. 2. We needed properties of
Local Hamiltonian reductions going beyond those proved in previous works
(whose results we'd misstated). We now prove the needed properties. See p. 6
for more on both point
Unbounded-error One-way Classical and Quantum Communication Complexity
This paper studies the gap between quantum one-way communication complexity
and its classical counterpart , under the {\em unbounded-error}
setting, i.e., it is enough that the success probability is strictly greater
than 1/2. It is proved that for {\em any} (total or partial) Boolean function
, , i.e., the former is always exactly one half
as large as the latter. The result has an application to obtaining (again an
exact) bound for the existence of -QRAC which is the -qubit random
access coding that can recover any one of original bits with success
probability . We can prove that -QRAC exists if and only if
. Previously, only the construction of QRAC using one qubit,
the existence of -RAC, and the non-existence of
-QRAC were known.Comment: 9 pages. To appear in Proc. ICALP 200
On Hausdorff dimension of the set of closed orbits for a cylindrical transformation
We deal with Besicovitch's problem of existence of discrete orbits for
transitive cylindrical transformations
where is an
irrational rotation on the circle \T and \varphi:\T\to\R is continuous,
i.e.\ we try to estimate how big can be the set
D(\alpha,\varphi):=\{x\in\T:|\varphi^{(n)}(x)|\to+\infty\text{as}|n|\to+\infty\}.
We show that for almost every there exists such that the
Hausdorff dimension of is at least . We also provide a
Diophantine condition on that guarantees the existence of
such that the dimension of is positive. Finally, for some
multidimensional rotations on \T^d, , we construct smooth
so that the Hausdorff dimension of is positive.Comment: 32 pages, 1 figur
Operator renewal theory and mixing rates for dynamical systems with infinite measure
We develop a theory of operator renewal sequences in the context of infinite
ergodic theory. For large classes of dynamical systems preserving an infinite
measure, we determine the asymptotic behaviour of iterates of the
transfer operator. This was previously an intractable problem.
Examples of systems covered by our results include (i) parabolic rational
maps of the complex plane and (ii) (not necessarily Markovian) nonuniformly
expanding interval maps with indifferent fixed points.
In addition, we give a particularly simple proof of pointwise dual ergodicity
(asymptotic behaviour of ) for the class of systems under
consideration.
In certain situations, including Pomeau-Manneville intermittency maps, we
obtain higher order expansions for and rates of mixing. Also, we obtain
error estimates in the associated Dynkin-Lamperti arcsine laws.Comment: Preprint, August 2010. Revised August 2011. After publication, a
minor error was pointed out by Kautzsch et al, arXiv:1404.5857. The updated
version includes minor corrections in Sections 10 and 11, and corresponding
modifications of certain statements in Section 1. All main results are
unaffected. In particular, Sections 2-9 are unchanged from the published
versio
Dynamical Instability and Transport Coefficient in Deterministic Diffusion
We construct both normal and anomalous deterministic biased diffusions to
obtain the Einstein relation for their time-averaged transport coefficients. We
find that the difference of the generalized Lyapunov exponent between biased
and unbiased deterministic diffusions is related to the normalized velocity
based on the ensemble average. By Hopf's ergodic theorem, the ratios between
the time-averaged velocity and the Lyapunov exponent for single trajectories
converge to a universal constant, which is proportional to the strength of the
bias. We confirm this theory using numerical simulations.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Geometries for universal quantum computation with matchgates
Matchgates are a group of two-qubit gates associated with free fermions. They
are classically simulatable if restricted to act between nearest neighbors on a
one-dimensional chain, but become universal for quantum computation with
longer-range interactions. We describe various alternative geometries with
nearest-neighbor interactions that result in universal quantum computation with
matchgates only, including subtle departures from the chain. Our results pave
the way for new quantum computer architectures that rely solely on the simple
interactions associated with matchgates.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Updated version includes an appendix extending
one of the result
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