scholarly journals Quantum gates via continuous time quantum walks in multiqubit systems with non-local auxiliary states

2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (5&6) ◽  
pp. 415-455
Author(s):  
Dmitry Solenov

Non-local higher-energy auxiliary states have been successfully used to entangle pairs of qubits in different quantum computing systems. Typically a longer-span non-local state or sequential application of few-qubit entangling gates are needed to produce a non-trivial multiqubit gate. In many cases a single non-local state that span over the entire system is difficult to use due to spectral crowding or impossible to have. At the same time, many multiqubit systems can naturally develop a network of multiple nonlocal higher-energy states that span over few qubits each. We show that continuous time quantum walks can be used to address this problem by involving multiple such states to perform local and entangling operations concurrently on many qubits. This introduces an alternative approach to multiqubit gate compression based on available physical resources. We formulate general requirements for such walks and discuss configurations of non-local auxiliary states that can emerge in quantum computing architectures based on self-assembled quantum dots, defects in diamond, and superconducting qubits, as examples. Specifically, we discuss a scalable multiqubit quantum register constructed as a single chain with nearest-neighbor interactions. We illustrate how quantum walks can be configured to perform single-, two- and three-qubit gates, including Hadamard, Control-NOT, and Toffoli gates. Continuous time quantum walks on graphs involved in these gates are investigated.

Entropy ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (8) ◽  
pp. 586 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Wang ◽  
Yi Zhang ◽  
Kai Lu ◽  
Xiaoping Wang ◽  
Kai Liu

The isomorphism problem involves judging whether two graphs are topologically the same and producing structure-preserving isomorphism mapping. It is widely used in various areas. Diverse algorithms have been proposed to solve this problem in polynomial time, with the help of quantum walks. Some of these algorithms, however, fail to find the isomorphism mapping. Moreover, most algorithms have very limited performance on regular graphs which are generally difficult to deal with due to their symmetry. We propose IsoMarking to discover an isomorphism mapping effectively, based on the quantum walk which is sensitive to topological structures. Firstly, IsoMarking marks vertices so that it can reduce the harmful influence of symmetry. Secondly, IsoMarking can ascertain whether the current candidate bijection is consistent with existing bijections and eventually obtains qualified mapping. Thirdly, our experiments on 1585 pairs of graphs demonstrate that our algorithm performs significantly better on both ordinary graphs and regular graphs.


2017 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo A. C. Rossi ◽  
Claudia Benedetti ◽  
Massimo Borrelli ◽  
Sabrina Maniscalco ◽  
Matteo G. A. Paris

2014 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zoltán Darázs ◽  
Anastasiia Anishchenko ◽  
Tamás Kiss ◽  
Alexander Blumen ◽  
Oliver Mülken

2011 ◽  
Vol 09 (03) ◽  
pp. 823-842 ◽  
Author(s):  
YANG GE ◽  
BENJAMIN GREENBERG ◽  
OSCAR PEREZ ◽  
CHRISTINO TAMON

We describe new constructions of graphs which exhibit perfect state transfer on continuous-time quantum walks. Our constructions are based on generalizations of the double cones and variants of the Cartesian graph products (which include the hypercube). We also describe a generalization of the path collapsing argument (which reduces questions about perfect state transfer to simpler weighted multigraphs) for graphs with equitable distance partitions.


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