Spelling suggestions: "subject:"kuantum logic"" "subject:"auantum logic""
1 |
Axiomatic quantum timespace structure : a preamble to the quantum topos conception of the vacuumRaptis, Ioannis January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
|
2 |
Categorical quantum models and logicsHeunen, Chris. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral) - Radboud Universiteit, Nijmegen, 2010. / Includes index.
|
3 |
Existence, uniqueness & asymptotic behaviour of the Wigner-Poisson system with an external Coulomb fieldBohun, Christopher Sean 25 August 2017 (has links)
This dissertation analyzes the Wigner-Poisson system in the presence
of an external Coulomb potential. In the first part, the Weyl
transform is defined and used to derive an exact quantum mechanical
equation for the Weyl transform of the density function ρw (the Wigner
function) known as the Wigner equation. This equation holds for any
Hamiltonian which is a function of the position and momentum
operators. The Wigner-Poisson system is then formally derived by
imposing various assumptions on the structure of the Hamiltonian. This
system describes the behaviour of an effective one-particle
distribution in the presence of a large ensemble of particles.
Furthermore, it allows the particles to either attract or repel each
other as well as attract or repel as a whole from a fixed Coulomb
source located at the origin. The second part details the question of
existence and uniqueness for the Wigner-Poisson system. It is shown
that provided the initial Wigner function is sufficiently regular
[special characters omitted] and is a valid Wigner distribution, then
the Wigner-Poisson system has a unique global mild solution [special
characters omitted]. This result is independent of both the nature of
the external Coulomb potential as well as the interparticle
interaction.The proof of this result is accomplished by first
transforming the Wigner-Poisson system into a countably infinite set
of Schrödinger equations which results in what is referred to as the
Schrödinger Poisson system. Using standard semigroup theory arguments,
existence and uniqueness of the Schrödinger-Poisson system is
established. The properties of the Wigner-Poisson system are then
obtained by reversing the transformation step. Regularity results for
both the Schrödinger-Poisson and the Wigner-Poisson systems are
compared to the case with no external Coulomb potential. In addition,
the known regularity results are extended when there is no external
field. The results illustrate that the introduction of an external
Coulomb potential slightly reduces the regularity of the solution.
This confirms a conjecture of Brezzi and Markowich. The third part
analyzes the asymptotic behaviour of the Wigner-Poisson system. If the
configurational energy Εₐ,ᵦ(t) is positive for all times then by
considering the Schrödinger-Poisson system, solutions will decay in
the sense of Lᵖ for 2 < p < 6. This generalizes a result of Illner,
Lange and Zweifel. Moreover, If the total energy is negative then the
solutions will not decay in the sense of Lᵖ for any 2 < p ≤ ∞. This
generalizes a result of Chadam and Glassey. Decay estimates for both
the Schrödinger-Poisson and the Wigner-Poisson systems are compared to
the case with no external Coulomb field. As with the regularity
results, the introduction of an external Coulomb field degrades the
reported decay rates of the solution. / Graduate
|
4 |
Quantum logic and its role in the interpretation of quantum mechanicsGibbins, Peter January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
|
5 |
Reversible Logic Synthesis Using a Non-blocking Order SearchPatino, Alberto 01 January 2010 (has links)
Reversible logic is an emerging area of research. With the rapid growth of markets such as mobile computing, power dissipation has become an increasing concern for designers (temperature range limitations, generating smaller transistors) as well as customers (battery life, overheating). The main benefit of utilizing reversible logic is that there exists, theoretically, zero power dissipation. The synthesis of circuits is an important part of any design cycle. The circuit used to realize any specification must meet detailed requirements for both layout and manufacturing. Quantum cost is the main metric used in reversible logic. Many algorithms have been proposed thus far which result in both low gate count and quantum cost. In this thesis the AP algorithm is introduced. The goal of the algorithm is to drive quantum cost down by using multiple non-blocking orders, a breadth first search, and a quantum cost reduction transformation. The results shown by the AP algorithm demonstrate that the resulting quantum cost for well-known benchmarks are improved by at least 9% and up to 49%.
|
6 |
High-fidelity quantum logic in Ca+Ballance, Christopher J. January 2014 (has links)
Trapped atomic ions are one of the most promising systems for building a quantum computer -- all of the fundamental operations needed to build a quantum computer have been demonstrated in such systems. The challenge now is to understand and reduce the operation errors to below the 'fault-tolerant threshold' (the level below which quantum error correction works), and to scale up the current few-qubit experiments to many qubits. This thesis describes experimental work concentrated primarily on the first of these challenges. We demonstrate high-fidelity single-qubit and two-qubit (entangling) gates with errors at or below the fault-tolerant threshold. We also implement an entangling gate between two different species of ions, a tool which may be useful for certain scalable architectures. We study the speed/fidelity trade-off for a two-qubit phase gate implemented in <sup>43</sup>Ca<sup>+</sup> hyperfine trapped-ion qubits. We develop an error model which describes the fundamental and technical imperfections / limitations that contribute to the measured gate error. We characterize and minimise various error sources contributing to the measured fidelity, allowing us to account for errors due to the single-qubit operations and state readout (each at the 0.1% level), and to identify the leading sources of error in the two-qubit entangling operation. We achieve gate fidelities ranging between 97.1(2)% (for a gate time t<sub>g</sub> = 3.8 μs) and 99.9(1)% (for t<sub>g</sub> = 100 μs), representing respectively the fastest and lowest-error two-qubit gates reported between trapped-ion qubits by nearly an order of magnitude in each case. We also characterise single-qubit gates with average errors below 10<sup>-4</sup> per operation, over an order of magnitude better than previously achieved with laser-driven operations. Additionally, we present work on a mixed-species entangling gate. We entangle of a single <sup>40</sup>Ca<sup>+</sup> ion and a single <sup>43</sup>Ca<sup>+</sup> ion with a fidelity of 99.8(5)%, and perform full tomography of the resulting entangled state. We describe how this mixed-species gate mechanism could be used to entangle <sup>43</sup>Ca<sup>+</sup> and <sup>88</sup>Sr<sup>+</sup>, a promising combination of ions for future experiments.
|
7 |
Non-additive probabilities and quantum logic in finite quantum systemsVourdas, Apostolos January 2016 (has links)
Yes / A quantum system Σ(d) with variables in Z(d) and with Hilbert space H(d), is considered. It is shown that the additivity relation of Kolmogorov probabilities, is not valid in the Birkhoff-von Neumann orthocomplemented modular lattice of subspaces L(d). A second lattice Λ(d) which is distributive and contains the subsystems of Σ(d) is also considered. It is shown that in this case also, the additivity relation of Kolmogorov probabilities is not valid. This suggests that a more general (than Kolmogorov) probability theory is needed, and here we adopt the Dempster-Shafer probability theory. In both of these lattices, there are sublattices which are Boolean algebras, and within these 'islands' quantum probabilities are additive.
|
8 |
Gluon Phenomenology and a Linear ToposSheppeard, Marni Dee January 2007 (has links)
In thinking about quantum causality one would like to approach rigorous QFT from outside the perspective of QFT, which one expects to recover only in a specific physical domain of quantum gravity. This thesis considers issues in causality using Category Theory, and their application to field theoretic observables. It appears that an abstract categorical Machian principle of duality for a ribbon graph calculus has the potential to incorporate the recent calculation of particle rest masses by Brannen, as well as the Bilson-Thompson characterisation of the particles of the Standard Model. This thesis shows how Veneziano n point functions may be recovered in such a framework, using cohomological techniques inspired by twistor theory and recent MHV techniques. This distinct approach fits into a rich framework of higher operads, leaving room for a generalisation to other physical amplitudes. The utility of operads raises the question of a categorical description for the underlying physical logic. We need to consider quantum analogues of a topos. Grothendieck's concept of a topos is a genuine extension of the notion of a space that incorporates a logic internal to itself. Conventional quantum logic has yet to be put into a form of equal utility, although its logic has been formulated in category theoretic terms. Axioms for a quantum topos are given in this thesis, in terms of braided monoidal categories. The associated logic is analysed and, in particular, elements of linear vector space logic are shown to be recovered. The usefulness of doing so for ordinary quantum computation was made apparent recently by Coecke et al. Vector spaces underly every notion of algebra, and a new perspective on it is therefore useful. The concept of state vector is also readdressed in the language of tricategories.
|
9 |
Quantum Circuit Synthesis using Group Decomposition and Hilbert SpacesSaraivanov, Michael S. 18 July 2013 (has links)
The exponential nature of Moore's law has inadvertently created huge data storage complexes that are scattered around the world. Data elements are continuously being searched, processed, erased, combined and transferred to other storage units without much regard to power consumption. The need for faster searches and power efficient data processing is becoming a fundamental requirement. Quantum computing may offer an elegant solution to speed and power through the utilization of the natural laws of quantum mechanics. Therefore, minimal cost quantum circuit implementation methodologies are greatly desired.
This thesis explores the decomposition of group functions and the Walsh spectrum for implementing quantum canonical cascades with minimal cost. Three different methodologies, using group decomposition, are presented and generalized to take advantage of different quantum computing hardware, such as ion traps and quantum dots. Quantum square root of swap gates and fixed angle rotation gates comprise the first two methodologies. The third and final methodology provides further quantum cost reduction by more efficiently utilizing Hilbert spaces through variable angle rotation gates. The thesis then extends the methodology to realize a robust quantum circuit synthesis tool for single and multi-output quantum logic functions.
|
10 |
An extension of the Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm to arbitrary quditsMarttala, Peter 01 August 2007
Recent advances in quantum computational science promise substantial improvements in the speed with which certain classes of problems can be computed. Various algorithms that utilize the distinctively non-classical characteristics of quantum mechanics have been formulated to take advantage of this promising new approach to computation. One such algorithm was formulated by David Deutsch and Richard Jozsa. By measuring the output of a quantum network that implements this algorithm, it is possible to determine with N 1 measurements certain global properties of a function f(x), where N is the number of network inputs. Classically, it may not be possible to determine these same properties without evaluating f(x) a number of times that rises exponentially as N increases. Hitherto, the potential power of this algorithm has been explored in the context of qubits, the quantum computational analogue of classical bits. However, just as one can conceive of classical computation in the context of non-binary logic, such as ternary or quaternary logic, so also can one conceive of corresponding higher-order quantum computational equivalents.<p>This thesis investigates the behaviour of the Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm in the context of these higher-order quantum computational forms of logic and explores potential applications for this algorithm. An important conclusion reached is that, not only can the Deutsch-Jozsa algorithms known computational advantages be formulated in more general terms, but also a new algorithmic property is revealed with potential practical applications.
|
Page generated in 0.1003 seconds