scholarly journals State preparation and evolution in quantum computing: A perspective from Hamiltonian moments

Author(s):  
Joseph C. Aulicino ◽  
Trevor Keen ◽  
Bo Peng
1998 ◽  
Vol 46 (4-5) ◽  
pp. 391-399 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Schneider ◽  
H.M. Wiseman ◽  
W.J. Munro ◽  
G.J. Milburn

Cryptography ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 3
Author(s):  
Alexandru Cojocaru ◽  
Léo Colisson ◽  
Elham Kashefi ◽  
Petros Wallden

Classical client remote state preparation (CC − RSP) is a primitive where a fully classical party (client) can instruct the preparation of a sequence of random quantum states on some distant party (server) in a way that the description is known to the client but remains hidden from the server. This primitive has many applications, most prominently, it makes blind quantum computing possible for classical clients. In this work, we give a protocol for classical client remote state preparation, that requires minimal resources. The protocol is proven secure against honest-but-curious servers and any malicious third party in a game-based security framework. We provide an instantiation of a trapdoor (approximately) 2-regular family of functions whose security is based on the hardness of the Learning-With-Errors problem, including a first analysis of the set of usable parameters. We also run an experimentation on IBM’s quantum cloud using a toy function. This is the first proof-of-principle experiment of classical client remote state preparation.


2004 ◽  
pp. 85-93
Author(s):  
S. Schneider ◽  
H. M. Wiseman ◽  
W. J. Munro ◽  
G. J. Milburn

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Fingerhuth ◽  
Tomáš Babej ◽  
Peter Wittek

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajendra K. Bera

It now appears that quantum computers are poised to enter the world of computing and establish its dominance, especially, in the cloud. Turing machines (classical computers) tied to the laws of classical physics will not vanish from our lives but begin to play a subordinate role to quantum computers tied to the enigmatic laws of quantum physics that deal with such non-intuitive phenomena as superposition, entanglement, collapse of the wave function, and teleportation, all occurring in Hilbert space. The aim of this 3-part paper is to introduce the readers to a core set of quantum algorithms based on the postulates of quantum mechanics, and reveal the amazing power of quantum computing.


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