quantum amplitude
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2022 ◽  
Vol 105 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomoki Tanaka ◽  
Shumpei Uno ◽  
Tamiya Onodera ◽  
Naoki Yamamoto ◽  
Yohichi Suzuki

2021 ◽  
Vol 104 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyeokjea Kwon ◽  
Joonwoo Bae

PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (10) ◽  
pp. e0258091
Author(s):  
Basma Elias ◽  
Ahmed Younes

Quantum signature is the use of the principles of quantum computing to establish a trusted communication between two parties. In this paper, a quantum signature scheme using amplitude amplification techniques will be proposed. To secure the signature, the proposed scheme uses a partial diffusion operator and a diffusion operator to hide/unhide certain quantum states during communication. The proposed scheme consists of three phases, preparation phase, signature phase and verification phase. To confuse the eavesdropper, the quantum states representing the signature might be hidden, not hidden or encoded in Bell states. It will be shown that the proposed scheme is more secure against eavesdropping when compared with relevant quantum signature schemes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 104 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuya Kaneko ◽  
Koichi Miyamoto ◽  
Naoyuki Takeda ◽  
Kazuyoshi Yoshino

Author(s):  
Shumpei Uno ◽  
Yohichi Suzuki ◽  
Keigo Hisanaga ◽  
Rudy Raymond ◽  
Tomoki Tanaka ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Duplij ◽  
Raimund Vogl

We propose a concept of quantum computing which incorporates an additional kind of uncertainty, i.e. vagueness (fuzziness), in a natural way by introducing new entities, obscure qudits (e.g. obscure qubits), which are characterized simultaneously by a quantum probability and by a membership function. To achieve this, a membership amplitude for quantum states is introduced alongside the quantum amplitude. The Born rule is used for the quantum probability only, while the membership function can be computed from the membership amplitudes according to a chosen model. Two different versions of this approach are given here: the “product” obscure qubit, where the resulting amplitude is a product of the quantum amplitude and the membership amplitude, and the “Kronecker” obscure qubit, where quantum and vagueness computations are to be performed independently (i.e. quantum computation alongside truth evaluation). The latter is called a double obscure-quantum computation. In this case, the measurement becomes mixed in the quantum and obscure amplitudes, while the density matrix is not idempotent. The obscure-quantum gates act not in the tensor product of spaces, but in the direct product of quantum Hilbert space and so called membership space which are of different natures and properties. The concept of double (obscure-quantum) entanglement is introduced, and vector and scalar concurrences are proposed, with some examples being given.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dmitry Grinko ◽  
Julien Gacon ◽  
Christa Zoufal ◽  
Stefan Woerner

AbstractWe introduce a variant of Quantum Amplitude Estimation (QAE), called Iterative QAE (IQAE), which does not rely on Quantum Phase Estimation (QPE) but is only based on Grover’s Algorithm, which reduces the required number of qubits and gates. We provide a rigorous analysis of IQAE and prove that it achieves a quadratic speedup up to a double-logarithmic factor compared to classical Monte Carlo simulation with provably small constant overhead. Furthermore, we show with an empirical study that our algorithm outperforms other known QAE variants without QPE, some even by orders of magnitude, i.e., our algorithm requires significantly fewer samples to achieve the same estimation accuracy and confidence level.


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