Elementary gates for quantum computation

Adriano Barenco(AT&T (United States)), Charles H. Bennett(AT&T (United States)), Richard Cleve(AT&T (United States)), David P. DiVincenzo(AT&T (United States)), Norman Margolus(AT&T (United States)), Peter W. Shor(AT&T (United States)), Tycho Sleator(AT&T (United States)), John A. Smolin(AT&T (United States)), Harald Weinfurter(AT&T (United States))
Physical Review A
November 1, 1995
Cited by 4,341Open Access
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Abstract

We show that a set of gates that consists of all one-bit quantum gates [U(2)] and the two-bit exclusive-OR gate [that maps Boolean values (x,y) to (x,x\ensuremath{\bigoplus}y)] is universal in the sense that all unitary operations on arbitrarily many bits n [U(${2}^{\mathit{n}}$)] can be expressed as compositions of these gates. We investigate the number of the above gates required to implement other gates, such as generalized Deutsch-Toffoli gates, that apply a specific U(2) transformation to one input bit if and only if the logical and of all remaining input bits is satisfied. These gates play a central role in many proposed constructions of quantum computational networks. We derive upper and lower bounds on the exact number of elementary gates required to build up a variety of two- and three-bit quantum gates, the asymptotic number required for n-bit Deutsch-Toffoli gates, and make some observations about the number required for arbitrary n-bit unitary operations.


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