Topological Quantum Computing and 3-Manifolds
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Some Preliminaries and Motivation: 3-Manifolds and Knot Complements
- Let M be a Hausdorff topological space covered by a (countable) family of open sets, , together with homeomorphisms, where is an open set of This defines M as a topological manifold. For smoothness we require that, where defined, is smooth in in the standard multivariable calculus sense. The family is called an atlas or a differentiable structure. Obviously, is not unique. Two atlases are said to be compatible if their union is also an atlas. From this comes the notion of a maximal atlas. Finally, the pair , with maximal, defines a smooth manifold of dimension n.
- An important extension of this construction yields the notion of smooth manifold with boundary, M, defined as above, but with the atlas such that the range of the coordinate maps, may be open in the half space, , that is, the subspace of for which one of the coordinates is non-positive, say As a subspace of has a topologically defined boundary, namely, the set of points for which Use this to define the (smooth) boundary of as the inverse image of these coordinate boundary points.
- Every compact, closed, oriented 2-manifold is homeomorphic to either or the connected sum
- Every compact 2-manifold with boundary can be obtained from one of these cases by cutting out the specific number of disks from one of the connected sums.
- Thurston’s Geometrization conjecture can be stated:The interior of every compact 3-manifold has a canonical decomposition into pieces (described above), which have one of the eight geometric structures.In short, every 3-manifold can be uniquely decomposed (long 2-spheres) into prime manifolds where some of these prime manifolds can be further split (along 2-tori) into graph G and hyperbolic manifolds H. Then, have a disjoint union of 2-tori as boundary; but how can we construct these manifolds having a geometric structure? A knot in mathematics is the embedding of a circle into the 3-sphere (or in ), i.e., a closed knotted curve. Let K be a prime knot (a knot not decomposable by a sum of two knots). With we denote a thicken knot, i.e., a closed knotted solid torus. The knot complement is a 3-manifold with boundary . It was shown that prime knots are divided into two classes: hyperbolic knots ( admits a hyperbolic structure) and non-hyperbolic knots ( admits one of the other seven geometric structures). An embedding of disjoints circles into is called a link Then, is the link complement. Here, the situation is more complicated: can admit a geometric structure or it can be decomposed into pieces with a geometric structure. are one of the main models for G or H for suitable knots and links. If we speak about 3-manifolds then we have to consider as one of the basic pieces. Furthermore, there is the Gordon–Luecke theorem: if two knot complements are homeomorphic, then the knots are equivalent (see in [16] for the statement of the exact theorem). Interestingly, knot complements of prime knots are determined by its fundamental group. For the fundamental group, one considers closed curves which are not contractible. Furthermore, two curves are equivalent if one can deform them into each other (homotopy relation). The concatenation of curves can be made into a group operation up to deformation equivalence (i.e., homotopy). Formally, it is the set of homotopy classes of maps (the closed curves) into a space X up to homopy, denoted by . The fundamental group of the knot complement is also known as knot group. Here, we refer to the books in [5,17,18] for a good introduction into this theory. The main idea of this paper is the usage of the knot group as substitute for a 3-manifold and try to use this group for quantum computing.
3. Knot Complement of the Trefoil Knot and the Braid Group
4. Using the Trefoil Knot Complement for Quantum Computing
5. Knot Group Representations via Berry Phases
6. Linking and 2-Qubit Operations
7. Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Asselmeyer-Maluga, T. Topological Quantum Computing and 3-Manifolds. Quantum Rep. 2021, 3, 153-165. https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum3010009
Asselmeyer-Maluga T. Topological Quantum Computing and 3-Manifolds. Quantum Reports. 2021; 3(1):153-165. https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum3010009
Chicago/Turabian StyleAsselmeyer-Maluga, Torsten. 2021. "Topological Quantum Computing and 3-Manifolds" Quantum Reports 3, no. 1: 153-165. https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum3010009
APA StyleAsselmeyer-Maluga, T. (2021). Topological Quantum Computing and 3-Manifolds. Quantum Reports, 3(1), 153-165. https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum3010009