Odd orders in Shor's factoring algorithm
Thomas Lawson

TL;DR
This paper investigates the potential to improve Shor's factoring algorithm by utilizing odd orders in the quantum order finding process, presenting techniques to extract factors from such cases.
Contribution
It introduces methods to leverage odd orders in the quantum order finding algorithm, enhancing the success probability of Shor's algorithm.
Findings
Techniques to retrieve order from odd orders and failed runs
Small but possible improvements in factoring success rate
Relevance for experimental demonstrations with small numbers
Abstract
Shor's factoring algorithm (SFA) finds the prime factors of a number, , exponentially faster than the best known classical algorithm. Responsible for the speed-up is a subroutine called the quantum order finding algorithm (QOFA) which calculates the order -- the smallest integer, , satisfying , where is a randomly chosen integer coprime to (meaning their greatest common divisor is one, ). Given , and with probability not less than , the factors are given by and . For odd it is assumed the factors cannot be found (since is not generally integer) and the QOFA is relaunched with a different value of . But a recent paper [E. Martin-Lopez: Nat Photon {\bf 6}, 773 (2012)] noted that the factors can sometimes be found from odd orders if…
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