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arXiv:1412.4006 [quant-ph]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Experimental Superposition of Orders of Quantum Gates

Lorenzo M. Procopio, Amir Moqanaki, Mateus Araújo, Fabio Costa, Irati A. Calafell, Emma G. Dowd, Deny R. Hamel, Lee A. Rozema, Časlav Brukner, Philip Walther

Published 2014-12-12Version 1

In a quantum computer, creating superpositions of quantum bits (qubits) in different states can lead to a speed-up over classical computers [1], but quantum mechanics also allows for the superposition of quantum circuits [2]. In fact, it has recently been theoretically predicted that superimposing quantum circuits, each with a different gate order, could provide quantum computers with an even further computational advantage [3-5]. Here, we experimentally demonstrate this enhancement by applying two quantum gates in a superposition of both possible orders to determine whether the two gates commute or anti-commute. We are able to make this determination with only a single use (or query) of each gate, while all quantum circuits with a fixed order of gates would require at least two uses of one of the gates [3]. Remarkably, when the problem is scaled to N gates, creating a superposition of quantum circuits is likely to provide an exponential advantage over classical algorithms, and a linear advantage over quantum algorithms with fixed gate order [4]. The new resource that we exploit in our experiment can be interpreted as a "superposition of causal orders". We demonstrate such a superposition could allow some quantum algorithms to be implemented with an efficiency that is unlikely to be achieved on a quantum computer with a fixed gate order.

Comments: 10 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables
Categories: quant-ph
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