Continuous limit of discrete quantum walks

Dheeraj M N and Todd A. Brun
Phys. Rev. A 91, 062304 – Published 5 June 2015

Abstract

Quantum walks can be defined in two quite distinct ways: discrete-time and continuous-time quantum walks (DTQWs and CTQWs). For classical random walks, there is a natural sense in which continuous-time walks are a limit of discrete-time walks. Quantum mechanically, in the discrete-time case, an additional “coin space” must be appended for the walk to have nontrivial time evolution. Continuous-time quantum walks, however, have no such constraints. This means that there is no completely straightforward way to treat a CTQW as a limit of a DTQW, as can be done in the classical case. Various approaches to this problem have been taken in the past. We give a construction for walks on d-regular, d-colorable graphs when the coin flip operator is Hermitian: from a standard DTQW we construct a family of discrete-time walks with a well-defined continuous-time limit on a related graph. One can think of this limit as a “coined” continuous-time walk. We show that these CTQWs share some properties with coined DTQWs. In particular, we look at a spatial search by a DTQW over the two-dimensional (2D) torus (a grid with periodic boundary conditions) of size N×N, where it was shown that a coined DTQW can search in time O(NlogN), but a standard CTQW takes Ω(N) time to search for a marked element. The continuous limit of the DTQW search over the 2D torus exhibits the O(NlogN) scaling, like the coined walk it is derived from. We also look at the effects of graph symmetry on the limiting walk, and show that the properties are similar to those of the DTQW as shown in Krovi and Brun, Phys. Rev. A 75, 062332 (2007).

  • Figure
  • Figure
  • Received 3 February 2015

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.91.062304

©2015 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Dheeraj M N*

  • Department of Electrical Engineering, IIT Madras, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600036, India

Todd A. Brun

  • Communication Sciences Institute, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089, USA

  • *ee11b091@ee.iitm.ac.in
  • tbrun@usc.edu

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Vol. 91, Iss. 6 — June 2015

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