Connecting indefinite causal order processes to composable quantum protocols in a spacetime
Matthias Salzger

TL;DR
This paper explores the relationship between indefinite causal order processes and quantum protocols in spacetime, establishing a framework for their composition and physical realizability.
Contribution
It introduces a method to connect process matrices with causal boxes, enabling well-defined composition and physical interpretation of indefinite causal order processes.
Findings
Operational equivalence between QC-QCs and process boxes
Construction of process boxes with unitary extension
Only processes compatible with fixed background spacetime are physically realizable
Abstract
Process matrices are a framework to model causal relations in the absence of a well-defined acyclic causal order. The framework is very general and does not even assume the existence of a background spacetime. As a result, it is an open question how the framework should be interpreted physically and how and even if composition can be defined. On the other hand, so-called causal boxes define a framework that allows for arbitrary composition. In this work, we treat quantum circuits with quantum control of causal order (QC-QC), a subset of process matrices, which can be interpreted as generalized quantum circuits, and process box, a subset of causal boxes, which can be interpreted as processes. We analyze their state spaces and define a notion of operational equivalence between QC-QCs and process boxes based on this analysis. We then explicitly construct for each QC-QC an operationally…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Advanced Memory and Neural Computing
