Quantum Brain
← Back to papers

The role of cohomology in quantum computation with magic states

R. Raussendorf, C. Okay, Michael Zurel, P. Feldmann·October 22, 2021·DOI: 10.22331/q-2023-04-13-979
PhysicsComputer Science

AI Breakdown

Get a structured breakdown of this paper — what it's about, the core idea, and key takeaways for the field.

Abstract

A web of cohomological facts relates quantum error correction, measurement-based quantum computation, symmetry protected topological order and contextuality. Here we extend this web to quantum computation with magic states. In this computational scheme, the negativity of certain quasiprobability functions is an indicator for quantumness. However, when constructing quasiprobability functions to which this statement applies, a marked difference arises between the cases of even and odd local Hilbert space dimension. At a technical level, establishing negativity as an indicator of quantumness in quantum computation with magic states relies on two properties of the Wigner function: their covariance with respect to the Clifford group and positive representation of Pauli measurements. In odd dimension, Gross' Wigner function – an adaptation of the original Wigner function to odd-finite-dimensional Hilbert spaces – possesses these properties. In even dimension, Gross' Wigner function doesn't exist. Here we discuss the broader class of Wigner functions that, like Gross', are obtained from operator bases. We find that such Clifford-covariant Wigner functions do not exist in any even dimension, and furthermore, Pauli measurements cannot be positively represented by them in any even dimension whenever the number of qudits is n≥2. We establish that the obstructions to the existence of such Wigner functions are cohomological.

Related Research

Quantum Intelligence

Ask about quantum research, companies, or market developments.