Book Image

Quantum Computing Algorithms

By : Barry Burd
5 (1)
Book Image

Quantum Computing Algorithms

5 (1)
By: Barry Burd

Overview of this book

Navigate the quantum computing spectrum with this book, bridging the gap between abstract, math-heavy texts and math-avoidant beginner guides. Unlike intermediate-level books that often leave gaps in comprehension, this all-encompassing guide offers the missing links you need to truly understand the subject. Balancing intuition and rigor, this book empowers you to become a master of quantum algorithms. No longer confined to canned examples, you'll acquire the skills necessary to craft your own quantum code. Quantum Computing Algorithms is organized into four sections to build your expertise progressively. The first section lays the foundation with essential quantum concepts, ensuring that you grasp qubits, their representation, and their transformations. Moving to quantum algorithms, the second section focuses on pivotal algorithms — specifically, quantum key distribution and teleportation. The third section demonstrates the transformative power of algorithms that outpace classical computation and makes way for the fourth section, helping you to expand your horizons by exploring alternative quantum computing models. By the end of this book, quantum algorithms will cease to be mystifying as you make this knowledge your asset and enter a new era of computation, where you have the power to shape the code of reality.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Free Chapter
2
Part 1 Nuts and Bolts
7
Part 2 Making Qubits Work for You
10
Part 3 Quantum Computing Algorithms
14
Part 4 Beyond Gate-Based Quantum Computing

Qiskit code for the BB84 algorithm

Our BB84 simulation is a 150-line program (give or take a few lines). To make the program comprehensible, we’ll divide it into 16 function definitions. Let’s start with the imports and constant declarations:

import randomfrom qiskit import QuantumCircuit, QuantumRegister, \
    ClassicalRegister, Aer, execute
NUMBER_OF_CIRCUITS = 100
DOES_EVE_EXIST = False
CHECK_MARK = u'\u2713'

According to these declarations, we’ll be creating 100 circuits – one for each of the qubits that Alice sends to Bob. We’ll simulate a situation in which no eavesdropper exists. For convenience, we will declare CHECK_MARK to be the Unicode symbol.

The main flow of execution looks like this:

circuits = create_circuits(NUMBER_OF_CIRCUITS,                           DOES_EVE_EXIST...