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Hamiltonian quantum computation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Hamiltonian quantum computation is a form of quantum computing. Unlike methods of quantum computation such as the adiabatic, measurement-based and circuit model where eternal control is used to apply operations on a register of qubits, Hamiltonian quantum computers operate without external control.[1][2][3]
Background
Hamiltonian quantum computation was the pioneering model of quantum computation, first proposed by Paul Benioff in 1980. Benioff's motivation for building a quantum mechanical model of a computer was to have a quantum mechanical description of artificial intelligence and to create a computer that would dissipate the least amount of energy allowable by the laws of physics.[1] However, his model was not time-independent and local.[4] Richard Feynman, independent of Benioff, also wanted to provide a description of a computer based on the laws of quantum physics. He solved the problem of a time-independent and local Hamiltonian by proposing a continuous-time quantum walk that could perform universal quantum computation.[2] Superconducting qubits,[5] Ultracold atoms and non-linear photonics[6] have been proposed as potential experimental implementations of Hamiltonian quantum computers.
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Definition
Given a list of quantum gates described as unitaries , define a hamiltonian
Evolving this Hamiltonian on a state composed of a clock register ( ) that constaines qubits and a data register () will output . At a time , the state of the clock register can be . When that happens, the state of the data register will be . The computation is complete and .[7]
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See also
References
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