English

Duality and Recycling Computing in Quantum Computers

Quantum Physics 2015-05-13 v1

Abstract

Quantum computer possesses quantum parallelism and offers great computing power over classical computer \cite{er1,er2}. As is well-know, a moving quantum object passing through a double-slit exhibits particle wave duality. A quantum computer is static and lacks this duality property. The recently proposed duality computer has exploited this particle wave duality property, and it may offer additional computing power \cite{r1}. Simply put it, a duality computer is a moving quantum computer passing through a double-slit. A duality computer offers the capability to perform separate operations on the sub-waves coming out of the different slits, in the so-called duality parallelism. Here we show that an nn-dubit duality computer can be modeled by an (n+1)(n+1)-qubit quantum computer. In a duality mode, computing operations are not necessarily unitary. A nn-qubit quantum computer can be used as an nn-bit reversible classical computer and is energy efficient. Our result further enables a (n+1)(n+1)-qubit quantum computer to run classical algorithms in a O(2n)O(2^n)-bit classical computer. The duality mode provides a natural link between classical computing and quantum computing. Here we also propose a recycling computing mode in which a quantum computer will continue to compute until the result is obtained. These two modes provide new tool for algorithm design. A search algorithm for the unsorted database search problem is designed.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0708.1986,
  title  = {Duality and Recycling Computing in Quantum Computers},
  author = {Gui Lu Long and Yang Liu},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0708.1986},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

4 pages and 3 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:07:33.539Z