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    Bent functions of maximal degree

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    In this article a technique for constructing p-ary bent functions from plateaued functions is presented. This generalizes earlier techniques of constructing bent from near-bent functions. The Fourier spectrum of quadratic monomials is analysed, examples of quadratic functions with highest possible absolute values in their Fourier spectrum are given. Applying the construction of bent functions to the latter class of functions yields bent functions attaining upper bounds for the algebraic degree when p=3,5p=3,5. Until now no construction of bent functions attaining these bounds was known

    Programming Quantum Computers Using Design Automation

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    Recent developments in quantum hardware indicate that systems featuring more than 50 physical qubits are within reach. At this scale, classical simulation will no longer be feasible and there is a possibility that such quantum devices may outperform even classical supercomputers at certain tasks. With the rapid growth of qubit numbers and coherence times comes the increasingly difficult challenge of quantum program compilation. This entails the translation of a high-level description of a quantum algorithm to hardware-specific low-level operations which can be carried out by the quantum device. Some parts of the calculation may still be performed manually due to the lack of efficient methods. This, in turn, may lead to a design gap, which will prevent the programming of a quantum computer. In this paper, we discuss the challenges in fully-automatic quantum compilation. We motivate directions for future research to tackle these challenges. Yet, with the algorithms and approaches that exist today, we demonstrate how to automatically perform the quantum programming flow from algorithm to a physical quantum computer for a simple algorithmic benchmark, namely the hidden shift problem. We present and use two tool flows which invoke RevKit. One which is based on ProjectQ and which targets the IBM Quantum Experience or a local simulator, and one which is based on Microsoft's quantum programming language Q#\#.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures. To appear in: Proceedings of Design, Automation and Test in Europe (DATE 2018
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