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You're reading from  Dancing with Qubits - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inMar 2024
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781837636754
Edition2nd Edition
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Robert S. Sutor
Robert S. Sutor
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Robert S. Sutor

Robert S. Sutor has been a technical leader and executive in the IT industry for over 40 years. More than two decades of that were spent in IBM Research in Yorktown Heights, New York USA. During his time there, he worked on and led efforts in symbolic mathematical computation, mathematical programming languages, optimization, AI, blockchain, and quantum computing. He is the author of Dancing with Qubits: How quantum computing works and how it can change the world and Dancing with Python: Learn Python software development from scratch and get started with quantum computing, also with Packt. He is the published co-author of several research papers and the book Axiom: The Scientific Computation System with the late Richard D. Jenks. Sutor was an IBM executive on the software side of the business in areas including Java web application servers, emerging industry standards, software on Linux, mobile, and open source. He was the Vice President of Corporate Development and, later, Chief Quantum Advocate, at Infleqtion, a quantum computing and quantum sensing company based in Boulder, Colorado USA. He is currently an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University at Buffalo, New York, USA. He is a theoretical mathematician by training, has a Ph.D. from Princeton University, and an undergraduate degree from Harvard College. He started coding when he was 15 and has used most of the programming languages that have come along.
Read more about Robert S. Sutor

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7.5 The Bloch sphere

We describe the state of a qubit by a vector Bloch sphere

Displayed math

in C2 with r1 and r2 nonnegative numbers in R.

The magnitudes r1 and r2 are related by r12 + r22 = 1. This is a mathematical condition.

We saw in section 7.3 that it’s the relative phase of φ2φ1 that is significant and not the individual phases φ1 and φ2. This is a physical condition and means we can take a to be real.

We also saw that we could represent a quantum state as

Displayed math

We do this via a nonlinear projection and a change of coordinates and get a point on the surface of the Bloch sphere, shown in Figure 7.7.

 Figure 7.7: The Bloch sphere

The two angles have the ranges 0 ≤ θπ and 0 ≤ φ < 2π. θ is measured from the positive z-axis and φ from the positive x-axis in the xy-plane.

The nonlinear...

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Dancing with Qubits - Second Edition
Published in: Mar 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781837636754

Author (1)

author image
Robert S. Sutor

Robert S. Sutor has been a technical leader and executive in the IT industry for over 40 years. More than two decades of that were spent in IBM Research in Yorktown Heights, New York USA. During his time there, he worked on and led efforts in symbolic mathematical computation, mathematical programming languages, optimization, AI, blockchain, and quantum computing. He is the author of Dancing with Qubits: How quantum computing works and how it can change the world and Dancing with Python: Learn Python software development from scratch and get started with quantum computing, also with Packt. He is the published co-author of several research papers and the book Axiom: The Scientific Computation System with the late Richard D. Jenks. Sutor was an IBM executive on the software side of the business in areas including Java web application servers, emerging industry standards, software on Linux, mobile, and open source. He was the Vice President of Corporate Development and, later, Chief Quantum Advocate, at Infleqtion, a quantum computing and quantum sensing company based in Boulder, Colorado USA. He is currently an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University at Buffalo, New York, USA. He is a theoretical mathematician by training, has a Ph.D. from Princeton University, and an undergraduate degree from Harvard College. He started coding when he was 15 and has used most of the programming languages that have come along.
Read more about Robert S. Sutor