Polyadic Braid Operators and Higher Braiding Gates

Polyadic Braid Operators and Higher Braiding Gates

Preprints (www.preprints.org) | NOT PEER-REVIEWED | Posted: 12 July 2021 Article Polyadic braid operators and higher braiding gates Steven Duplij and Raimund Vogl Center for Information Technology (WWU IT), University of Münster, Röntgenstrasse 7-13 D-48149 Münster, Germany 1 Keywords: Yang-Baxter equation, braid group, qubit, ternary, polyadic, braiding quantum gate 2 A new kind of quantum gates, higher braiding gates, as matrix solutions of the 3 polyadic braid equations (different from the generalized Yang-Baxter equations) is 4 introduced. Such gates lead to another special multiqubit entanglement which can speed 5 up key distribution and accelerate algorithms. Ternary braiding gates acting on three 6 qubit states are studied in details. We also consider exotic noninvertible gates which can 7 be related with qubit loss, and define partial identities (which can be orthogonal), partial 8 unitarity, and partially bounded operators (which can be noninvertible). We define two 9 classes of matrices, star and circle ones, such that the magic matrices (connected with 10 the Cartan decomposition) belong to the star class. The general algebraic structure of the 11 introduced classes is described in terms of semigroups, ternary and 5-ary groups and 12 modules. The higher braid group and its representation by the higher braid operators 13 are given. Finally, we show, that for each multiqubit state there exist higher braiding 14 gates which are not entangling, and the concrete conditions to be non-entangling are 15 given for the obtained binary and ternary gates. 16 1. Introduction 17 The modern development of the quantum computing technique implies various 18 extensions of its foundational concepts [1–3]. One of the main problems in the physical 19 realization of quantum computers is presence of errors, which implies that it is desirable 20 that quantum computations be provided with error correction, or that ways be found 21 to make the states more stable, which leads to the concept of topological quantum 22 computation (for reviews, see, e.g., [4–6], and references therein). In the Turaev approach 23 [7], link invariants can be obtained from the solutions of the constant Yang-Baxter 24 Citation: . Universe 2021, 1, 0. equation (the braid equation). It was realized that the topological entanglement of knots https://doi.org/ 25 and links is deeply connected with quantum entanglement [8,9]. Indeed, if the solutions 26 to the constant Yang-Baxter equation [10] (Yang-Baxter operators/maps [11,12]) are Received: 27 interpreted as a special class of quantum gate, namely braiding quantum gates [13,14], Accepted: 28 then the inclusion of non-entangling gates does not change the relevant topological Published: 29 invariants [15,16]. For further properties and applications of braiding quantum gates, 30 see [17–20]. Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral 31 In this paper we obtain and study the solutions to the higher arity (polyadic) braid with regard to jurisdictional claims in 32 equations introduced in [21,22], as a polyadic generalization of the constant Yang-Baxter published maps and institutional af- 33 equation (which is considerably different from the generalized Yang-Baxter equation of filiations. 34 [23–26]). We introduce special classes of matrices (star and circle types), to which most 35 of the solutions belong, and find that the so-called magic matrices [18,27,28] belong to 36 the star class. We investigate their general non-trivial group properties and polyadic Copyright: © 2021 by the au- 37 generalizations. We then consider the invertible and non-invertible matrix solutions to thor. Submitted to Universe for pos- 38 the higher braid equations as the corresponding higher braiding gates acting on multi- sible open access publication un- 39 der the terms and conditions of qubit states. It is important that multi-qubit entanglement can speed up quantum key the Creative Commons Attribution 40 distribution [29] and accelerate various algorithms [30]. As an example, we have made (CC BY) license (https://creativecom- 41 detailed computations for the ternary braiding gates as solutions to the ternary braid mons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/). 42 equations [21,22]. A particular solution to the n-ary braid equation is also presented. It Version July 9, 2021 submitted to Universe https://www.mdpi.com/journal/universe © 2021 by the author(s). Distributed under a Creative Commons CC BY license. Preprints (www.preprints.org) | NOT PEER-REVIEWED | Posted: 12 July 2021 Version July 9, 2021 submitted to Universe 2 of 48 43 is shown, that for each multi-qubit state there exist higher braiding gates which are not 44 entangling, and the concrete relations for that are obtained, which can allow us to build 45 non-entangling networks. 46 2. Yang-Baxter operators 47 Recall here [9,13] the standard construction of the special kind of gates we will 48 consider, the braiding gates, in terms of solutions to the constant Yang-Baxter equation [10] 49 (called also algebraic Yang-Baxter equation [31]), or the (binary) braid equation [21]. 50 2.1. Yang-Baxter maps and braid group First we consider a general abstract construction of the (binary) braid equation. Let V be a vector space over a field K and the mapping CV2 : V ⊗ V ! V ⊗ V, where ⊗ = ⊗K is the tensor product over K. A linear operator (braid operator) CV2 is called a Yang-Baxter operator (denoted by R in [13] and by B in [10]) or Yang-Baxter map [12] (denoted by F in [11]), if it satisfies the braid equation [32–34] (CV2 ⊗ idV) ◦ (idV ⊗CV2 ) ◦ (CV2 ⊗ idV) = (idV ⊗CV2 ) ◦ (CV2 ⊗ idV) ◦ (idV ⊗CV2 ), (2.1) 51 where idV : V ! V, is the identity operator in V. The connection of CV2 with the 52 R-matrix R is given by CV2 = t ◦ R, where t is the flip operation [10,11,32]. Let us introduce the operators A1,2 :V ⊗ V ⊗ V ! V ⊗ V ⊗ V by A1 = CV2 ⊗ idV,A2 = idV ⊗CV2 , (2.2) It follows from (2.1) that A1 ◦ A2 ◦ A1 = A2 ◦ A1 ◦ A2. (2.3) −1 −1 −1 If CV2 is invertible, then CV2 is also the Yang-Baxter map with A1 and A2 . Therefore, the operators Ai represent the braid group B3 = fe, s1, s2 j s1s2s1 = s2s1s2g by the mapping p3 as p3 p3 p3 p3 B3 −! End(V ⊗ V ⊗ V), s1 7! A1, s2 7! A2, e 7! idV . (2.4) The representation pm of the braid group with m strands sisi+1si = si+1sisi+1, i = 1, . , m − 1, Bm = fe, s1,..., sm−1 (2.5) sisj = sjsi, ji − jj ≥ 2, ⊗m ⊗m can be obtained using operators Ai(m) :V !V analogous to (2.2) i−1 m−i−1 z }| { z }| { ⊗m Ai(m) = idV ⊗ ... ⊗ idV ⊗ CV2 ⊗ idV ⊗ . idV,A0(m) = (idV) , i = 1, . , m − 1, (2.6) ⊗m by the mapping pm : Bm ! EndV in the following way pm(si) = Ai(m), pm(e) = A0(m). (2.7) 53 In this notation (2.2) is Ai = Ai(2), i = 1, 2, and so (2.3) represents B3 by (2.4). 54 2.2. Constant matrix solutions to the Yang-Baxter equation Consider next a concrete version of the vector space V which is used in the quantum computation, a d-dimensional euclidean vector space Vd over complex numbers C with a basis feig, i = 1, ... , d. A linear operator Vd ! Vd is given by a complex d × d matrix, the identity operator idV becomes the identity d × d matrix Id, and the Yang-Baxter map CV2 Preprints (www.preprints.org) | NOT PEER-REVIEWED | Posted: 12 July 2021 Version July 9, 2021 submitted to Universe 3 of 48 2 2 is a d × d matrix Cd2 (denoted by R in [31]) satisfying the matrix algebraic Yang-Baxter equation (Cd2 ⊗ Id)(Id ⊗ Cd2 )(Cd2 ⊗ Id) = (Id ⊗ Cd2 )(Cd2 ⊗ Id)(Id ⊗ Cd2 ), (2.8) being an equality between two matrices of size d3 × d3. We use the unified notations which can be straightforwardly generalized for higher braid operators. In components d 0 0 j1 j2 C 2 ◦ e ⊗ e = c · e 0 ⊗ e 0 , (2.9) d i1 i2 ∑ i1i2 j j 0 0 1 2 j1,j2=1 the Yang-Baxter equation (2.8) has the shape (where summing is by primed indices) d 0 0 0 d 0 0 0 j1 j2 j3k3 k1k2 l2l3 k1l1 k2k3 k1k2k3 c · c 0 · c 0 0 = c · c 0 · c 0 0 ≡ q . (2.10) ∑ i1i2 j i j j ∑ i2i3 i l l l i1i2i3 0 0 0 2 3 1 3 0 0 0 1 2 1 3 j1,j2,j3=1 l1,l2,l3=1 4 55 The system (2.10) is highly overdetermined, because the matrix Cd2 contains d 6 56 unknown entries, while there are d cubic polynomial equations for them. So for d = 2 57 we have 64 equations for 16 unknowns, while for d = 3 there are 729 equations for 2 58 the 81 unknown entries of Cd2 . The unitarity of Cd2 imposes a further d quadratic 59 equations, and so for d = 2 we have in total 68 equations for 16 unknowns. This 60 makes the direct discovery of solutions for the matrix Yang-Baxter equation (2.10) very 61 cumbersome. Nevertheless, using a conjugation classes method, the unitary solutions 62 and their classification for d = 2 were presented in [31]. In the standard matrix form (2.9) can be presented by introducing the 4-dimensional ˜ vector space V4 = V ⊗ V with the natural basis e˜k˜ = fe1 ⊗ e1, e1 ⊗ e2, e2 ⊗ e1, e2 ⊗ e2g, where k˜ = 1, ... , 8 is a cumulative index. The linear operator C˜4 : V˜4 ! V˜4 corresponding × c C˜ ◦ e = 4 c · e to (2.9) is given by 4 4 matrix ˜ı˜j˜ as 4 ˜ı˜ ∑j˜=1 ˜ı˜j˜ ˜j˜.

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