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Tuesday, January 29, 2013
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
Annenberg 107

Institute for Quantum Information Seminar

Quantum computational matter
Stephen Bartlett, University of Sydney,

Low-temperature phases of strongly-interacting quantum many-body systems can exhibit a range of exotic quantum phenomena, from superconductivity to fractionalized particles.  One exciting prospect is that the ground or low-temperature thermal state of an engineered quantum system can function as a quantum computer.  For this idea to be sensible, the usefulness of a ground or low-temperature thermal state for quantum computation cannot be critically dependent on the details of the system's Hamiltonian; if so, engineering such systems would be difficult or even impossible.  A much more powerful result would be the existence of a robust ordered phase which is characterised by its ability to perform quantum computation.  

I'll discuss some recent results on the existence of such a quantum computational phase of matter, working within the measurement-based (cluster state) model of quantum computation.  I will show that the ability to perform certain logic gates such as the identity gate over long distances in the model corresponds precisely to the recently-proposed notion of 'symmetry-protected topological order' for an appropriate symmetry group.  Using some techniques from fault-tolerance, we can then prove that any perturbation of the cluster state model will result in a ground state that remains universal for quantum computation, provided the perturbation is sufficiently small and respects a certain symmetry.

References:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1201.4877
http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.4805

For more information, please contact Ann Harvey by phone at 626-395-4964 or by email at [email protected] or visit Institute for Quantum Information Seminar.