1,392 research outputs found
Perturbative Gadgets at Arbitrary Orders
Adiabatic quantum algorithms are often most easily formulated using many-body
interactions. However, experimentally available interactions are generally
two-body. In 2004, Kempe, Kitaev, and Regev introduced perturbative gadgets, by
which arbitrary three-body effective interactions can be obtained using
Hamiltonians consisting only of two-body interactions. These three-body
effective interactions arise from the third order in perturbation theory. Since
their introduction, perturbative gadgets have become a standard tool in the
theory of quantum computation. Here we construct generalized gadgets so that
one can directly obtain arbitrary k-body effective interactions from two-body
Hamiltonians. These effective interactions arise from the kth order in
perturbation theory.Comment: Corrected an error: U dagger vs. U invers
Asymptotic behavior of the least common multiple of consecutive arithmetic progression terms
Let and be two integers with , and let and be
integers with and . In this paper, we prove that , where is a constant depending on and .Comment: 8 pages. To appear in Archiv der Mathemati
Experimental study of ultracold neutron production in pressurized superfluid helium
We have investigated experimentally the pressure dependence of the production
of ultracold neutrons (UCN) in superfluid helium in the range from saturated
vapor pressure to 20bar. A neutron velocity selector allowed the separation of
underlying single-phonon and multiphonon pro- cesses by varying the incident
cold neutron (CN) wavelength in the range from 3.5 to 10{\AA}. The predicted
pressure dependence of UCN production derived from inelastic neutron scattering
data was confirmed for the single-phonon excitation. For multiphonon based UCN
production we found no significant dependence on pressure whereas calculations
from inelastic neutron scattering data predict an increase of 43(6)% at 20bar
relative to saturated vapor pressure. From our data we conclude that applying
pressure to superfluid helium does not increase the overall UCN production rate
at a typical CN guide.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures Version accepted for publication in PR
The least common multiple of a sequence of products of linear polynomials
Let be the product of several linear polynomials with integer
coefficients. In this paper, we obtain the estimate: as , where is a constant depending on
.Comment: To appear in Acta Mathematica Hungaric
Integral Difference Ratio Functions on Integers
number theoryInternational audienceTo Jozef, on his 80th birthday, with our gratitude for sharing with us his prophetic vision of Informatique Abstract. Various problems lead to the same class of functions from integers to integers: functions having integral difference ratio, i.e. verifying f (a) â f (b) ⥠0 (mod (a â b)) for all a > b. In this paper we characterize this class of functions from Z to Z via their a la Newton series expansions on a suitably chosen basis of polynomials (with rational coefficients). We also exhibit an example of such a function which is not polynomial but Bessel like
Quantum walks based on an interferometric analogy
There are presently two models for quantum walks on graphs. The "coined" walk
uses discrete time steps, and contains, besides the particle making the walk, a
second quantum system, the coin, that determines the direction in which the
particle will move. The continuous walk operates with continuous time. Here a
third model for a quantum walk is proposed, which is based on an analogy to
optical interferometers. It is a discrete-time model, and the unitary operator
that advances the walk one step depends only on the local structure of the
graph on which the walk is taking place. No quantum coin is introduced. This
type of walk allows us to introduce elements, such as phase shifters, that have
no counterpart in classical random walks. Walks on the line and cycle are
discussed in some detail, and a probability current for these walks is
introduced. The relation to the coined quantum walk is also discussed. The
paper concludes by showing how to define these walks for a general graph.Comment: Latex,18 pages, 5 figure
Quantum entangling power of adiabatically connected hamiltonians
The space of quantum Hamiltonians has a natural partition in classes of
operators that can be adiabatically deformed into each other. We consider
parametric families of Hamiltonians acting on a bi-partite quantum state-space.
When the different Hamiltonians in the family fall in the same adiabatic class
one can manipulate entanglement by moving through energy eigenstates
corresponding to different value of the control parameters. We introduce an
associated notion of adiabatic entangling power. This novel measure is analyzed
for general quantum systems and specific two-qubits examples are
studiedComment: 5 pages, LaTeX, 2 eps figures included. Several non minor changes
made (thanks referee) Version to appear in the PR
Robustness of adiabatic quantum computation
We study the fault tolerance of quantum computation by adiabatic evolution, a
quantum algorithm for solving various combinatorial search problems. We
describe an inherent robustness of adiabatic computation against two kinds of
errors, unitary control errors and decoherence, and we study this robustness
using numerical simulations of the algorithm.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, REVTe
The performance of the quantum adiabatic algorithm on random instances of two optimization problems on regular hypergraphs
In this paper we study the performance of the quantum adiabatic algorithm on
random instances of two combinatorial optimization problems, 3-regular 3-XORSAT
and 3-regular Max-Cut. The cost functions associated with these two
clause-based optimization problems are similar as they are both defined on
3-regular hypergraphs. For 3-regular 3-XORSAT the clauses contain three
variables and for 3-regular Max-Cut the clauses contain two variables. The
quantum adiabatic algorithms we study for these two problems use interpolating
Hamiltonians which are stoquastic and therefore amenable to sign-problem free
quantum Monte Carlo and quantum cavity methods. Using these techniques we find
that the quantum adiabatic algorithm fails to solve either of these problems
efficiently, although for different reasons.Comment: 20 pages, 15 figure
- âŠ