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Semantics of Higher-Order Quantum Computation via Geometry of Interaction | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Semantics of Higher-Order Quantum Computation via Geometry of Interaction


Abstract:

While much of the current study on quantum computation employs low-level formalisms such as quantum circuits, several high-level languages/calculi have been recently prop...Show More

Abstract:

While much of the current study on quantum computation employs low-level formalisms such as quantum circuits, several high-level languages/calculi have been recently proposed aiming at structured quantum programming. The current work contributes to the semantical study of such languages, by providing interaction-based semantics of a functional quantum programming language, the latter is based on linear lambda calculus and is equipped with features like the! modality and recursion. The proposed denotational model is the first one that supports the full features of a quantum functional programming language, we also prove adequacy of our semantics. The construction of our model is by a series of existing techniques taken from the semantics of classical computation as well as from process theory. The most notable among them is Girard's Geometry of Interaction (GoI), categorically formulated by Abramsky, Haghverdi and Scott. The mathematical genericity of these techniques - largely dueto their categorical formulation - is exploited for our move from classical to quantum.
Date of Conference: 21-24 June 2011
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 01 August 2011
ISBN Information:
Print ISSN: 1043-6871
Conference Location: Toronto, ON, Canada
Department Computer Science, University of Tokyo, Japan
RIMS, Kyoto University, Japan

I. Introduction

Computation and communication using quantum data has attracted growing attention. On the one hand, quantum computation provides a real breakthrough in computing power—at least for certain applications—as demonstrated by Shor's algorithm. On the other hand, quantum communication realizes “unconditional security” e.g. via quantum key distribution. The latter is being even tested for practical use.

Department Computer Science, University of Tokyo, Japan
RIMS, Kyoto University, Japan
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References

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