English

Implementation of Shor's Algorithm on a Linear Nearest Neighbour Qubit Array

Quantum Physics 2007-05-23 v1

Abstract

Shor's algorithm, which given appropriate hardware can factorise an integer NN in a time polynomial in its binary length LL, has arguable spurred the race to build a practical quantum computer. Several different quantum circuits implementing Shor's algorithm have been designed, but each tacitly assumes that arbitrary pairs of qubits within the computer can be interacted. While some quantum computer architectures possess this property, many promising proposals are best suited to realising a single line of qubits with nearest neighbour interactions only. In light of this, we present a circuit implementing Shor's factorisation algorithm designed for such a linear nearest neighbour architecture. Despite the interaction restrictions, the circuit requires just 2L+42L+4 qubits and to first order requires 8L48L^{4} gates arranged in a circuit of depth 32L332L^{3} -- identical to first order to that possible using an architecture that can interact arbitrary pairs of qubits.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.quant-ph/0402196,
  title  = {Implementation of Shor's Algorithm on a Linear Nearest Neighbour Qubit Array},
  author = {Austin G. Fowler and Simon J. Devitt and Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/0402196},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

9 pages, 8 figures