Effective Pure States for Bulk Quantum Computation
Abstract
In bulk quantum computation one can manipulate a large number of indistinguishable quantum computers by parallel unitary operations and measure expectation values of certain observables with limited sensitivity. The initial state of each computer in the ensemble is known but not pure. Methods for obtaining effective pure input states by a series of manipulations have been described by Gershenfeld and Chuang (logical labeling) and Cory et al. (spatial averaging) for the case of quantum computation with nuclear magnetic resonance. We give a different technique called temporal averaging. This method is based on classical randomization, requires no ancilla qubits and can be implemented in nuclear magnetic resonance without using gradient fields. We introduce several temporal averaging algorithms suitable for both high temperature and low temperature bulk quantum computing and analyze the signal to noise behavior of each.
Cite
@article{arxiv.quant-ph/9706053,
title = {Effective Pure States for Bulk Quantum Computation},
author = {Emanuel Knill and Isaac Chuang and Raymond Laflamme},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/9706053},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
24 pages in LaTex, 14 figures, the paper is also avalaible at http://qso.lanl.gov/qc/