Non-Abelian quantum holonomies, i.e., unitary state changes solely induced by
geometric properties of a quantum system, have been much under focus in the
physics community as generalizations of the Abelian Berry phase. Apart from
being a general phenomenon displayed in various subfields of quantum physics,
the use of holonomies has lately been suggested as a robust technique to obtain
quantum gates; the building blocks of quantum computers. Non-Abelian holonomies
are usually associated with cyclic changes of quantum systems, but here we
consider a generalization to noncyclic evolutions. We argue that this open-path
holonomy can be used to construct quantum gates. We also show that a structure
of partially defined holonomies emerges from the open-path holonomy. This
structure has no counterpart in the Abelian setting. We illustrate the general
ideas using an example that may be accessible to tests in various physical
systems.Comment: Extended version, new title, journal reference adde