arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1903.06035 [quant-ph]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Completeness of the ZX-Calculus

Emmanuel Jeandel, Simon Perdrix, Renaud Vilmart

Published 2019-03-13Version 1

The ZX-Calculus is a graphical language for diagrammatic reasoning in quantum mechanics and quantum information theory. It comes equipped with an equational presentation. We focus here on a very important property of the language: completeness, which roughly ensures the equational theory captures all of quantum mechanics. We first improve on the known-to-be-complete presentation or the so-called Clifford fragment of the language - a restriction that is not universal - by adding some axioms. Thanks to a system of back-and-forth translation between the ZX-Calculus and a third-party complete graphical language, we prove that the provided axiomatisation is complete for the first approximately universal fragment of the language, namely Clifford+T. We then prove that the expressive power of this presentation, though aimed at achieving completeness for the aforementioned restriction, extends beyond Clifford+T, to a class of diagrams that we call linear with Clifford+T constants. We use another version of the third-party language - and an adapted system of back-and-forth translation - to complete the language for the ZX-Calculus as a whole, that is, with no restriction. We briefly discuss the added axioms, and finally, we provide a complete axiomatisation for an altered version of the language which involves an additional generator, making the presentation simpler.

Comments: Contains an appendix. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1801.10142
Categories: quant-ph, cs.LO
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:quant-ph/0208061 (Published 2002-08-09)
On the Completeness of Quantum Mechanics
arXiv:0806.2037 [quant-ph] (Published 2008-06-12)
Leggett inequalities and the completeness of quantum mechanics
arXiv:2012.09736 [quant-ph] (Published 2020-12-17)
Contextual inferences, (non)locality, and the (in)completeness of quantum mechanics