Quantum Programmable Reflections
Similar to a classical processor, which is an algorithm for reading a program and executing its instructions on input data, a universal programmable quantum processor is a fixed quantum channel that reads a quantum program $\lvert\psi_{U}\rangle$ that causes the processor to approximately apply an a...
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Zusammenfassung: | Similar to a classical processor, which is an algorithm for reading a program
and executing its instructions on input data, a universal programmable quantum
processor is a fixed quantum channel that reads a quantum program
$\lvert\psi_{U}\rangle$ that causes the processor to approximately apply an
arbitrary unitary $U$ to a quantum data register. The present work focuses on a
class of simple programmable quantum processors for implementing reflection
operators, i.e. $U = e^{i \pi \lvert\psi\rangle\langle\psi\rvert}$ for an
arbitrary pure state $\lvert\psi\rangle$ of finite dimension $d$. Unlike
quantum programs that assume query access to $U$, our program takes the form of
independent copies of the state to be reflected about $\lvert\psi_U\rangle =
\lvert\psi\rangle^{\otimes n}$. We then identify the worst-case optimal
algorithm among all processors of the form $\text{tr}_{\text{Program}}[V
(\lvert\phi\rangle\langle\phi\rvert \otimes
(\lvert\psi\rangle\langle\psi\rvert)^{\otimes n}) V^\dagger]$ where the
algorithm $V$ is a unitary linear combination of permutations. By generalizing
these algorithms to processors for arbitrary-angle rotations, $e^{i \alpha
\lvert\psi\rangle\langle\psi\rvert}$ for $\alpha \in \mathbb R$, we give a
construction for a universal programmable processor with better scaling in $d$.
For programming reflections, we obtain a tight analytical lower bound on the
program dimension by bounding the Holevo information of an ensemble of
reflections applied to an entangled probe state. The lower bound makes use of a
block decomposition of the uniform ensemble of reflected states with respect to
irreps of the partially transposed permutation matrix algebra, and two
representation-theoretic conjectures based on extensive numerical evidence. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.03648 |