A qutrit (or quantum trit) is a unit of quantum information that is realized by a 3-level quantum system, that may be in a superposition of three mutually orthogonal quantum states.[1]

The qutrit is analogous to the classical radix-3 trit, just as the qubit, a quantum system described by a superposition of two orthogonal states, is analogous to the classical radix-2 bit.

There is ongoing work to develop quantum computers using qutrits[2][3][4] and qudits in general.[5][6][7]

Representation

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A qutrit has three orthonormal basis states or vectors, often denoted  ,  , and   in Dirac or bra–ket notation. These are used to describe the qutrit as a superposition state vector in the form of a linear combination of the three orthonormal basis states:

 ,

where the coefficients are complex probability amplitudes, such that the sum of their squares is unity (normalization):

 

The qubit's orthonormal basis states   span the two-dimensional complex Hilbert space  , corresponding to spin-up and spin-down of a spin-1/2 particle. Qutrits require a Hilbert space of higher dimension, namely the three-dimensional   spanned by the qutrit's basis  ,[8] which can be realized by a three-level quantum system.

An n-qutrit register can represent 3n different states simultaneously, i.e., a superposition state vector in 3n-dimensional complex Hilbert space.[9]

Qutrits have several peculiar features when used for storing quantum information. For example, they are more robust to decoherence under certain environmental interactions.[10] In reality, manipulating qutrits directly might be tricky, and one way to do that is by using an entanglement with a qubit.[11]

Qutrit quantum gates

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The quantum logic gates operating on single qutrits are   unitary matrices and gates that act on registers of   qutrits are   unitary matrices (the elements of the unitary groups U(3) and U(3n) respectively).[12]

The rotation operator gates[a] for SU(3) are  , where   is the a'th Gell-Mann matrix, and   is a real value. The Lie algebra of the matrix exponential is provided here. The same rotation operators are used for gluon interactions, where the three basis states are the three colors ( ) of the strong interaction.[13][14][b]

The global phase shift gate for the qutrit[c] is   where the phase factor   is called the global phase.

This phase gate performs the mapping   and together with the 8 rotation operators is capable of expressing any single-qutrit gate in U(3), as a series circuit of at most 9 gates.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ This can be compared with the three rotation operator gates for qubits. We get eight linearly independent rotation operators by selecting appropriate  . For example, we get the 1st rotation operator for SU(3) by setting   and all others to zero.
  2. ^ Note:   Quarks and gluons have color charge interactions in SU(3), not U(3), meaning there are no pure phase shift rotations allowed for gluons. If such rotations were allowed, it would mean that there would be a 9th gluon.[15]
  3. ^ Comparable with the global phase shift gate for qubits.

References

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  1. ^ Nisbet-Jones, Peter B. R.; Dilley, Jerome; Holleczek, Annemarie; Barter, Oliver; Kuhn, Axel (2013). "Photonic qubits, qutrits and ququads accurately prepared and delivered on demand". New Journal of Physics. 15 (5): 053007. arXiv:1203.5614. Bibcode:2013NJPh...15e3007N. doi:10.1088/1367-2630/15/5/053007. ISSN 1367-2630. S2CID 110606655.
  2. ^ Yurtalan, M. A.; Shi, J.; Kononenko, M.; Lupascu, A.; Ashhab, S. (2020-10-27). "Implementation of a Walsh-Hadamard Gate in a Superconducting Qutrit". Physical Review Letters. 125 (18): 180504. arXiv:2003.04879. Bibcode:2020PhRvL.125r0504Y. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.180504. PMID 33196217. S2CID 128064435.
  3. ^ Morvan, A.; Ramasesh, V. V.; Blok, M. S.; Kreikebaum, J. M.; O’Brien, K.; Chen, L.; Mitchell, B. K.; Naik, R. K.; Santiago, D. I.; Siddiqi, I. (2021-05-27). "Qutrit Randomized Benchmarking". Physical Review Letters. 126 (21): 210504. arXiv:2008.09134. Bibcode:2021PhRvL.126u0504M. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.210504. hdl:1721.1/143809. PMID 34114846. S2CID 221246177.
  4. ^ Goss, Noah; Morvan, Alexis; Marinelli, Brian; Mitchell, Bradley K.; Nguyen, Long B.; Naik, Ravi K.; Chen, Larry; Jünger, Christian; Kreikebaum, John Mark; Santiago, David I.; Wallman, Joel J.; Siddiqi, Irfan (2022-12-05). "High-fidelity qutrit entangling gates for superconducting circuits". Nature Communications. 13 (1): 7481. arXiv:2206.07216. Bibcode:2022NatCo..13.7481G. doi:10.1038/s41467-022-34851-z. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 9722686. PMID 36470858.
  5. ^ "Qudits: The Real Future of Quantum Computing?". IEEE Spectrum. 28 June 2017. Retrieved 2021-05-24.
  6. ^ Fischer, Laurin E.; Chiesa, Alessandro; Tacchino, Francesco; Egger, Daniel J.; Carretta, Stefano; Tavernelli, Ivano (2023-08-28). "Universal Qudit Gate Synthesis for Transmons". PRX Quantum. 4 (3): 030327. arXiv:2212.04496. Bibcode:2023PRXQ....4c0327F. doi:10.1103/PRXQuantum.4.030327. S2CID 254408561.
  7. ^ Nguyen, Long B.; Goss, Noah; Siva, Karthik; Kim, Yosep; Younis, Ed; Qing, Bingcheng; Hashim, Akel; Santiago, David I.; Siddiqi, Irfan (2023-12-29). "Empowering high-dimensional quantum computing by traversing the dual bosonic ladder". arXiv:2312.17741 [quant-ph].
  8. ^ Byrd, Mark (1998). "Differential geometry on SU(3) with applications to three state systems". Journal of Mathematical Physics. 39 (11): 6125–6136. arXiv:math-ph/9807032. Bibcode:1998JMP....39.6125B. doi:10.1063/1.532618. ISSN 0022-2488. S2CID 17645992.
  9. ^ Caves, Carlton M.; Milburn, Gerard J. (2000). "Qutrit entanglement". Optics Communications. 179 (1–6): 439–446. arXiv:quant-ph/9910001. Bibcode:2000OptCo.179..439C. doi:10.1016/s0030-4018(99)00693-8. ISSN 0030-4018. S2CID 27185877.
  10. ^ Melikidze, A.; Dobrovitski, V. V.; De Raedt, H. A.; Katsnelson, M. I.; Harmon, B. N. (2004). "Parity effects in spin decoherence". Physical Review B. 70 (1): 014435. arXiv:quant-ph/0212097. Bibcode:2004PhRvB..70a4435M. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.70.014435. S2CID 56567962.
  11. ^ B. P. Lanyon,1 T. J. Weinhold, N. K. Langford, J. L. O'Brien, K. J. Resch, A. Gilchrist, and A. G. White, Manipulating Biphotonic Qutrits, Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 060504 (2008) (link)
  12. ^ Colin P. Williams (2011). Explorations in Quantum Computing. Springer. pp. 22–23. ISBN 978-1-84628-887-6.
  13. ^ David J. Griffiths (2008). Introduction to Elementary Particles (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. pp. 283–288, 366–369. ISBN 978-3-527-40601-2.
  14. ^ Stefan Scherer; Matthias R. Schindler (31 May 2005). "A Chiral Perturbation Theory Primer". p. 1–2. arXiv:hep-ph/0505265.
  15. ^ Ethan Siegel (Nov 18, 2020). "Why Are There Only 8 Gluons?". Forbes.
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