English

Quantum computation from a quantum logical perspective

Quantum Physics 2007-05-23 v2

Abstract

It is well-known that Shor's factorization algorithm, Simon's period-finding algorithm, and Deutsch's original XOR algorithm can all be formulated as solutions to a hidden subgroup problem. Here the salient features of the information-processing in the three algorithms are presented from a different perspective, in terms of the way in which the algorithms exploit the non-Boolean quantum logic represented by the projective geometry of Hilbert space. From this quantum logical perspective, the XOR algorithm appears directly as a special case of Simon's algorithm, and all three algorithms can be seen as exploiting the non-Boolean logic represented by the subspace structure of Hilbert space in a similar way. Essentially, a global property of a function (such as a period, or a disjunctive property) is encoded as a subspace in Hilbert space representing a quantum proposition, which can then be efficiently distinguished from alternative propositions, corresponding to alternative global properties, by a measurement (or sequence of measurements) that identifies the target proposition as the proposition represented by the subspace containing the final state produced by the algorithm.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.quant-ph/0605243,
  title  = {Quantum computation from a quantum logical perspective},
  author = {Jeffrey Bub},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/0605243},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

17 pages, no figures. The title has been changed, misprints and minor errors have been corrected, and some clarifying remarks have been added