49 research outputs found
A Rubik's Cube inspired approach to Clifford synthesis
The problem of decomposing an arbitrary Clifford element into a sequence of
Clifford gates is known as Clifford synthesis. Drawing inspiration from
similarities between this and the famous Rubik's Cube problem, we develop a
machine learning approach for Clifford synthesis based on learning an
approximation to the distance to the identity. This approach is probabilistic
and computationally intensive. However, when a decomposition is successfully
found, it often involves fewer gates than existing synthesis algorithms.
Additionally, our approach is much more flexible than existing algorithms in
that arbitrary gate sets, device topologies, and gate fidelities may
incorporated, thus allowing for the approach to be tailored to a specific
device.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Quasinormal modes of asymptotically flat rotating black holes
We study the main properties of general linear perturbations of rotating
black holes in asymptotically flat higher-dimensional spacetimes. In
particular, we determine the quasinormal mode (QNM) spectrum of singly spinning
and equal angular momenta Myers-Perry black holes (MP BHs). Emphasis is also
given to the timescale of the ultraspinning and bar-mode instabilities in these
two families of MP BHs. For the bar-mode instabilities in the singly spinning
MP BH, we find excellent agreement with our linear analysis and the non-linear
time evolution of Shibata and Yoshino for d=6,7 spacetime dimensions. We find
that d=5 singly spinning BHs are linearly stable. In the context of studying
general relativity in the large dimension limit, we obtain the QNM spectrum of
Schwarzschild BHs and rotating MP BHs for large dimensions. We identify two
classes of modes. For large dimensions, we find that in the limit of zero
rotation, unstable modes of the MP BHs connect to a class of Schwarzschild QNMs
that saturate to finite values.Comment: 52 pages. 25 figure
Holographic dual of hot Polchinski-Strassler quark-gluon plasma
Abstract: We construct the supergravity dual of the hot quark-gluon plasma in the mass-deformed N = 4 Super-Yang-Mills theory (also known as N = 1∗). The full ten-dimensional type IIB holographic dual is described by 20 functions of two variables, which we determine numerically, and it contains a black hole with S5 horizon topology. As we lower the temperature to around half of the mass of the chiral multiplets, we find evidence for (most likely a first-order) phase transition, which could lead either to one of the Polchinski-Strassler confining, screening, or oblique vacua with polarized branes, or to an intermediate phase corresponding to blackened polarized branes with an S2 ×S3 horizon topology. This phase transition is a feature that could in principle be seen by putting the theory on the lattice, and thus our result for the ratio of the chiral multiplet mass to the phase transition temperature, mc/T = 2.15467491205(6), constitutes the first prediction of string theory and AdS/CFT that could be independently checked via four-dimensional super-QCD lattice computation. We also construct the black-hole solution in certain five-dimensional gauged supergravity truncations and, without directly using uplift/reduction formulae, we find strong evidence that the five- and ten-dimensional solutions are the same. This indicates that five-dimensional gauged supergravity is powerful enough to capture the physics of the high-temperature deconfined phase of the Polchinski-Strassler quark-gluon plasma