scholarly journals Non-Probabilistic Approach to the Time of Energy Emission in Small Quantum Systems

2015 ◽  
Vol 06 (09) ◽  
pp. 1277-1288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanisƚaw Olszewski
1996 ◽  
Vol 77 (18) ◽  
pp. 3763-3766 ◽  
Author(s):  
Naama Brenner ◽  
Shmuel Fishman

2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Philipp Niemann ◽  
Robert Wille ◽  
Rolf Drechsler

Abstract Quantum systems provide a new way of conducting computations based on the so-called qubits. Due to the potential for significant speed-ups, this field received significant research attention in recent years. The Clifford+T library is a very promising and popular gate library for these kinds of computations. Unlike other libraries considered so far, it consists of only a small number of gates for all of which robust, fault-tolerant realizations are known for many technologies that seem to be promising for large-scale quantum computing. As a consequence, (logic) synthesis of Clifford+T quantum circuits became an important research problem. However, previous work in this area has several drawbacks: Corresponding approaches are either only applicable to very small quantum systems or lead to circuits that are far from being optimal. The latter is mainly caused by the fact that current synthesis realizes the desired circuit by a local, i.e., column-wise, consideration of the underlying unitary transformation matrix to be synthesized. In this paper, we analyze the conceptual drawbacks of this approach and propose to overcome them by taking a global view of the matrices and perform a separation of concerns regarding individual synthesis steps. We precisely describe a corresponding algorithm as well as its efficient implementation on top of decision diagrams. Experimental results confirm the resulting benefits and show improvements of up to several orders of magnitudes in costs compared to previous work.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (20) ◽  
pp. 10727-10732
Author(s):  
Yu-Chen Cheng ◽  
Sara Mikaelsson ◽  
Saikat Nandi ◽  
Lisa Rämisch ◽  
Chen Guo ◽  
...  

When small quantum systems, atoms or molecules, absorb a high-energy photon, electrons are emitted with a well-defined energy and a highly symmetric angular distribution, ruled by energy quantization and parity conservation. These rules are based on approximations and symmetries which may break down when atoms are exposed to ultrashort and intense optical pulses. This raises the question of their universality for the simplest case of the photoelectric effect. Here we investigate photoionization of helium by a sequence of attosecond pulses in the presence of a weak infrared laser field. We continuously control the energy of the photoelectrons and introduce an asymmetry in their emission direction, at variance with the idealized rules mentioned above. This control, made possible by the extreme temporal confinement of the light–matter interaction, opens a road in attosecond science, namely, the manipulation of ultrafast processes with a tailored sequence of attosecond pulses.


2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (9&10) ◽  
pp. 857-887
Author(s):  
Gary McConnell ◽  
David Jennings

We study the correlation structure of separable and classical states in $2\times2$-~and~$2\times3$-dimensional quantum systems with fixed spectra. Even for such simple systems the maximal correlation - as measured by mutual information - over the set of unitarily accessible separable states is highly non-trivial to compute; however for the $2\times2$ case a particular class of spectra admits full analysis and allows us to contrast classical states with more general separable states. We analyse a particular entropic binary relation on the set of spectra and prove for the qubit-qutrit case that this relation alone picks out a unique classical maximum state for mutual information. Moreover the $2\times3$ case is the largest system with such a property.


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (7&8) ◽  
pp. 568-594
Author(s):  
Nathan Wiebe ◽  
Christopher Grandade

We examine the question of whether quantum mechanics places limitations on the ability of small quantum devices to learn. We specifically examine the question in the context of Bayesian inference, wherein the prior and posterior distributions are encoded in the quantum state vector. We conclude based on lower bounds from Grover’s search that an efficient blackbox method for updating the distribution is impossible. We then address this by providing a new adaptive form of approximate quantum Bayesian inference that is polynomially faster than its classical anolog and tractable if the quantum system is augmented with classical memory or if the low–order moments of the distribution are protected through redundant preparation. This work suggests that there may be a connection between fault tolerance and the capacity of a quantum system to learn from its surroundings.


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