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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Complexity and multi-functional variants of the Quantum-to-Quantum Bernoulli Factories
arXiv
Authors: Francesco Hoch, Taira Giordani, Gonzalo Carvacho, Nicolò Spagnolo, Fabio Sciarrino
Year
2025
Paper ID
15817
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
178
Citations
N/A
Abstract
A Bernoulli factory is a model for randomness manipulation that transforms an initial Bernoulli random variable into another Bernoulli variable by applying a predetermined function relating the output bias to the input one. In literature, quantum-to-quantum Bernoulli factory schemes have been proposed, which encode both the input and output variables using qubit amplitudes. This fundamental concept can serve as a subroutine for quantum algorithms that involve Bayesian inference and Monte Carlo methods, or that require data encryption, like in blind quantum computation. In this work, we present a characterisation of the complexity of the quantum-to-quantum Bernoulli factory by providing a lower bound on the required number of qubits needed to implement the protocol, an upper bound on the success probability and the quantum circuit that saturates the bounds. We also formalise and analyse two different variants of the original problem that address the possibility of increasing the number of input biases or the number of functions implemented by the quantum-to-quantum Bernoulli factory. The obtained results can be used as a framework for randomness manipulation via such an approach.
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- This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- A Bernoulli factory is a model for randomness manipulation that transforms an initial Bernoulli random variable into another Bernoulli variable by applying a predetermined...
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