Circuits that provide a constant output of either or can be viewed as having the output qubit disconnected from the input qubits. It is therefore expected that the input qubits measure as .
Output qubit is constant |
Outputs qubit is constant
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In the circuit diagrams, the functions are shown within a dashed line border. It is important to note that an gate that flips to has no effect in the Hadamard basis. passes through an gate unchanged.
A sub-class of balanced functions uses only a single input qubit to decide whether the output qubit is or .
Output qubit is the value of one input qubit |
Output qubit is the negation of one input qubit
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Separating the Bell State
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When the CNOT gate acts upon two qubits that are perfectly correlated in the state, the outputs are the unentangled states and . The CNOT gate is its own inverse.
To demonstrate this, we show that in any chosen basis the perfect correlation and the operation of the CNOT gate combine to produce a constant output.
Selecting the computational basis we have:
Qubit A's effect on qubit B
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Based on qubit B correlating exactly with qubit A and then qubit B being subjected to the CNOT X-rotation depending on qubit A:
correlates to which results in
correlates to which results in
Qubit B's effect on qubit A
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The basis vectors that we've chosen, represented by Hadamard basis vectors are:
Separates into:
and
The other basis vector:
Separates into:
and
So the resulting state of summing the results of the basis transformations (and dividing by 2) is the constant:
Further worked example
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Using an arbitrarily-selected basis of:
Qubit A's effect on qubit B
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Based on qubit B correlating exactly with qubit A and then qubit B being subjected to the CNOT X-rotation depending on qubit A:
Separates into:
and which equals
The other basis vector:
Separates into:
and which equals
So the resulting state of summing the results of the basis transformations (and dividing by 2) is the constant:
Qubit B's effect on qubit A
[edit]
The basis vectors that we've chosen, represented by Hadamard basis vectors are:
Separates into:
and which equals
The other basis vector:
Separates into:
and which equals
So the resulting state of summing the results of the basis transformations (and dividing by 2) is the constant:
The four Bell states form a Bell basis. A perfect correlation between any two bases on the individual qubits can be described as a sum of Bell states. For example, is maximally entangled but not a Bell state; it represents a correlation between the bases and . It can be rewritten as using Bell basis states.[a]
The overlap expression is typically interpreted as the probability amplitude for the state \psi to collapse into the state \phi.
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