Quantum walks, limits and transport equations
Giuseppe Di Molfetta

TL;DR
This paper explores the use of quantum walks with a new property called plasticity to simulate a wide range of physical transport phenomena, including on curved surfaces, advancing quantum simulation methods.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of plastic quantum walks that can simulate transport equations on various geometries, including curved surfaces, in both discrete and continuous limits.
Findings
Plastic QWs can simulate general transport equations.
QWs on triangular lattices can be extended to arbitrary triangulations.
Continuous limits of QWs include curved Dirac equations in 2+1 dimensions.
Abstract
This manuscript gathers and subsumes a long series of works on using QW to simulate transport phenomena. Quantum Walks (QWs) consist of single and isolated quantum systems, evolving in discrete or continuous time steps according to a causal, shift-invariant unitary evolution in discrete space. We start reminding some necessary fundamentals of linear algebra, including the definitions of Hilbert space, tensor state, the definition of linear operator and then we briefly present the principles of quantum mechanics on which this thesis is grounded. After having reviewed the literature of QWs and the main historical approaches to their study, we then move on to consider a new property of QWs, the plasticity. Plastic QWs are those ones admitting both continuous time-discrete space and continuous spacetime time limit. We show that such QWs can be used to quantum simulate a large class of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum-Dot Cellular Automata · Surface and Thin Film Phenomena · Electron and X-Ray Spectroscopy Techniques
