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Published byAmbrose Chapman Modified over 9 years ago
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The Hidden Subgroup Problem
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Problem of great importance in Quantum Computation Most Q.A. that run exponentially faster than their classical counterparts fall into the framework of HSP Simon’s Algorithm, Shor’s Algorithm for factoring, Shor’s discrete logarithm algorithm equivalent to HSP
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Quantum Fourier Transform
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Example 3 qubit QFT:
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Shor’s Algorithm
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Can be implemented by the Quantum Circuit:
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Shor’s Algorithm
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Perform measurement: get a j (and thus a multiple of m) After k trials obtain k number multiples of m.
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Shor’s Algorithm
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Elements of Group Theory Group G: set of elements {g}, equipped with an internal composition law
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Elements of Group Theory Group G: set of elements {g}, equipped with an internal composition law
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Elements of Group Theory Group G: set of elements {g}, equipped with an internal composition law Subgroup: a non empty set which is a group on its own, under the same composition law
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Elements of Group Theory Group G: set of elements {g}, equipped with an internal composition law Subgroup: a non empty set which is a group on its own, under the same composition law
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The Hidden Abelian Subgroup Problem
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The Simplest Example
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The Hidden Abelian Subgroup Problem The Simplest Example We don’t know M, d, H but we know G and we have a “machine” performing the function f
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The Hidden Abelian Subgroup Problem The Simplest Example Quantum circuit:
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The Hidden Abelian Subgroup Problem
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References Chris Lomont: http://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0411037v1.pdfhttp://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0411037v1.pdf Frederic Wang http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1008/1008.0010.pdfhttp://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1008/1008.0010.pdf http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_Fourier_transform
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