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12:05 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by meowzz
Thanks, just wanted to confirm. — meowzz 10 mins ago
 
12:30 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Yuzuriha Inori
What kind of error are we working with? Incoherent or Coherent? — Yuzuriha Inori 12 mins ago
 
12:55 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Mark S
Can you help to clarify what you have done already? Where are you confused? Are you asking if, being in a superposition of only two basis states ($\vert 0\rangle$ and $\vert 1\rangle$), then why would $\vert *\rangle$ be a qutrit? We want to help but please clarify what you are confused about? — Mark S 20 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Yuzuriha Inori
This is a slight detour to what the question asks, but there are instances where Hamiltonians need not be Hermitian. A slightly weaker condition of PT symmetry actually suffices and it gives rise to a broader range of functions for analysis. For starters, one can look at arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0703096Yuzuriha Inori 23 mins ago
 
 
4 hours later…
5:20 AM
@Boson track stackoverflow comments 600 -f CONTAINS LENGTH -v thank -30 -n thank_bot
 
Tracking comments on stackoverflow as directed in SOBotics Workshop
New tracker started: thank_bot
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Junior Grão
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by zym
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by CodeSleepRepeat
 
5:40 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by reham501
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by reza cahyono
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Bakuretsuツ
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by xiongzhong li
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by DoingThisForFun
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Som V. Tambe
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Rob
Asked and answered in the book Quantum Computing: A Gentle Introduction, chapter 12 exercises; is this a homework question? — Rob 11 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Young Tae Won
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Young Tae Won
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by J.K.A.
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by comiventor
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Björn Trier
 
6:20 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Quoc Van Tang
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by ehmhrgelcighsawmlv
 
6:40 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Stapler23
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Devendra Singh
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Cristian Dumitrescu
Thank you for your suggestion @MStern . My answer would not be as good as Abrams observations in the link above, the interested reader can read his thesis (OR the relevant pages ). I wonder though whether quantum gate teleportation, the possibility to apply a quantum gate to an unknown state during teleportation could solve this problem. quantumcomputing.stackexchange.com/a/1810/10110 Basically, each iteration would be represented by such a quantum gate teleportation (back and forth ) between two systems A and B. I don't know if this solves the problem, but it's worth a look — Cristian Dumitrescu 14 secs ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Martin Vesely
Concerning D-Wave, it is not gate-based quantum computer, so question how it implements Rz gate is irrelevant. — Martin Vesely 17 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Techuser7890
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Huzefa Usama
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by steve
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Cristian Dumitrescu
I like the fact that you can keep a record of the corrections and apply them later. — Cristian Dumitrescu 13 mins ago
 
7:40 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Anish B.
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Luca Vlad
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Bogdan Tudor
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Himanshu Suthar
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by bigant02
 
8:10 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Krishna089
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Guru Krishna
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Monish B
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Anabel
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by BosnianDev
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Quoc Van Tang
[ Boson ] New comment posted by JSdJ
A little bit off-topic, but I was wondering about your statement 'similar to how there is a convention around how unobservable ... when controlling unitary operations.' If U is any unitary, is the convention then to take the representative of U in SU? — JSdJ 6 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Ruben Alfonso Casillas Pacheco
I tried to access thru a web-IDE and it worked without problems. Someone knows where can I find the settings or the file in the package? — Ruben Alfonso Casillas Pacheco 10 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by JSdJ
In D-Wave system's, the effective Hamiltonian of the entire system is changed so that the answer of the question is encoded into the ground state of that Hamiltonian. Applying a gate in any gate-based quantum computer is also effectively changing the Hamiltonian, invoking a rotation around an axis or a coupling between certain states. The same goes for the adiabatic quantum computer - there are no gates, per se, but the phases of qubits (i.e. parts of the Hamiltonian) still might need to be changed to arrive at the desired full-system Hamiltonian. — JSdJ 15 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Karthic Srinivasan
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by A.Chinese
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by rauleop
 
8:50 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by saravana
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Oliver Zhang
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Andre Moura
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by user10980228
 
9:15 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Rammus
Has the book covered controlled gates yet? See this wiki subsection. — Rammus 6 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by shards
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Vibhor Dube
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by hellb0y77
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by M khorsand
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by darf
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Irina Zorg
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by tomi
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by ps1234
 
10:05 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Henry_Fordham
yes,this is what i mean, From Solovay-Kitaev, I know I can realize any single qubit with{Hadamard,Phase,pi/8} with accurcy 𝜀, and in real hardware, what is the reliable accurcy? — Henry_Fordham 3 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Nelimee
Hi Henry_Fordham! Could you elaborate a little more your question? Do you want to know the theoretical accuracy we can achieve with Solovay-Kitaev, the practical accuracy on a real hardware, something else? — Nelimee 10 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by peterh - Reinstate Monica
"Quantum Computing verstehen" means "To understand Quantum Computing" (German). — peterh - Reinstate Monica 12 mins ago
 
10:20 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by SreRoR
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by VLDCHK
[ Boson ] New comment posted by brzepkowski
That's great answer, thank you! — brzepkowski 17 mins ago
 
10:50 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Rahul Aggarwal
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Martin
But then where would you use the k from $U = \sum^{T - 1}_{k=0}$ $|k\rangle$ $\langle k |$ $ \otimes$ $e^{i A k}$ ? (in the code that j which you mentioned was actually this k, sorry for the confusion). I thought the simulation time depends on that variable, since you will basically have 4 unitaries of the form e^(iAk) and k changes (when you use MultiplexOperationsFromGenerator). — Martin 17 mins ago
 
11:10 AM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by olivier dadoun
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Alexander Golys
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by polymath
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Razvan Zamfir
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Godfrey Tan
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Shivaji Mutkule
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by user1447820
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[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by user2315104
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[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Akshay
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Abhirajsinh Thakore
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[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Jackey12345
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Samson Gold
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Craig Gidney
@JSdJ The convention is to include an unnecessary detail in the definition of the original gate (the global phase) and then use that to decide the relative phase of the controlled operation. It's such a natural thing to do that it's almost not worth even calling it a convention. — Craig Gidney 14 mins ago
 
12:20 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Hiro
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by user13622894
 
12:50 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Sameul.T
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Stephan Lechner
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Sharmila V
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by David Ledger
[ Boson ] New comment posted by FelRPI
@Rammus I had a look at that wiki article and went back to my book to look for "controlled gates", and they actually briefly cover it. Thanks alot for the tip, sometimes i'm just missing a keyword to google for :) — FelRPI 4 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Nir
 
1:20 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Sri
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Ali Majed
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by carmiac
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Skyris
You're right, in the paper, they compute the expectation value of Y. Since I am implementing this on a simulator, I run the circuit multiple times and compute the probabilities just like you mentioned. However, the simulator only does measurements in the computational basis, hence my question — Skyris 4 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Rammus
FelRPI No problem, congratulations on working it out :). @Oldville The classical bit is presumably encoded into a qubit in the compuataional basis via $ a \mapsto |a\rangle$. — Rammus 8 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Oldville
The figure is quite confused: the controlled H is fed with a classical bit and controlled by a classical bit, but produces a quantum state. — Oldville 14 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by YanivGK
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Sumit Goyal
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Ansonee
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Dharmraj043
 
1:50 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Hoo
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by sunshilong369
[ Boson ] New comment posted by DaftWullie
The Pauli Z matrix is diagonal in the standard measurement basis. — DaftWullie 9 secs ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Skyris
Just a question though. Why is the normal measurement a Pauli Z mesurement — Skyris 23 mins ago
 
2:20 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Azima
 
2:40 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by 眠りネロク
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by [Shahbaz ](stackoverflow.com/users/13397262/shahbaz)
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Golu
 
3:00 PM
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3:30 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Alex
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Stephan Leinert
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by John Soon
 
3:50 PM
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4:00 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Bharath Varma
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[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Bibin Binny
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Ganesh
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by chandan_kr_jha
 
4:20 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by glS
you didn't add a link to the paper.. — glS 3 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Oleg Ovcharenko
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Mo Pishdar
[ Boson ] New comment posted on stackoverflow by Student of Science
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Cryoris
I see, no there is currently no way to not use the Parameter class. That used to be possible but was removed because there was no use-case where Parameter did not work. You open an issue on GitHub to address this :) However there are ways to calculate expectation values, its actually quite easy. Check out this notebook. — Cryoris 3 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Skyris
@glS, I just added it. Sorry I forgot to add it before — Skyris 20 mins ago
 
4:47 PM
@Boson stop thank_bot
 
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5:10 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Cryoris
The SnapshotExpectationValue is developed to be fast. It computes the expectation value via matrix multiplication, not using shots. — Cryoris 22 mins ago
 
6:00 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by M. Stern
Comments can be deleted later, and the question will show up as unanswered. To name two reasons why you should not answer in a comment. — M. Stern 1 min ago
 
6:25 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Sam Palmer
to answer your question more directly, to me the definition of a neural network, now more a buzzword, is the application of a parametrisable combination of functions used to approximate a target function, whether this is 'wires and weights' or rotations. — Sam Palmer 5 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Sam Palmer
The transfer function for each perceptron is a non-linear function that takes a linear combination of inputs to produce an output. In the simplest case we try to approximate a function using as linear combination of functions (perceptrons). In qnn we already have our transfer functions defined ... they are our unitary rotations. Arbitary unitary operators can be decomposed into a sequence of controlled rotations, hence in a qnn we aim to approximate the function, an arbitary unitary, by searching for the sequence of rotations, in this case our parameters to adjust are the angles. — Sam Palmer 18 mins ago
 
 
2 hours later…
8:30 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by glS
whether that's enough to justify the terminology, is a matter of opinion. IMHO it is a bit of a stretch, but others will disagree. Regardless, I don't see how this question can be answered objectively, in lack of a strict definition of what a "QNN" should be (which there isn't). Also, @Skyris each post should contain a single question. You can create different posts to ask different questions. — glS 4 mins ago
[ Boson ] New comment posted by glS
@SamPalmer but, if I'm reading the paper correctly, there is a crucial difference in that there is no nonlinearity in these "QNNs". In NNs, the nonlinearity component is pivotal, lest the whole function being linear and not able to capture complex patterns. There is nothing of that in the QNN (nor there could be, unless measurements are introduced). Their circuit is trained to reproduce unitary relations between input and output states. Tbh the only thing I see in common with NNs is the use of a parametrisation in terms of a sequence of trained maps.. — glS 8 mins ago
 
 
3 hours later…
11:25 PM
[ Boson ] New comment posted by Ryan
Ok, thanks, now I understand a little better what you are trying to do. So I also see your original code doing something non-trivial if I just replace IntAsDouble(j) with something like IntAsDouble(j+1) or even IntAsDouble(j-1). It isn't immediately obvious to me why this is happening, but my guess is that there is some subtle bug in your implementation where the unitary is only actually getting applied for the j==0 case. Do you need to ensure that both registers are in superposition before applying the unitary? e.g.: ApplyToEach(H, input); ApplyToEach(H, register);Ryan 13 mins ago
 

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