Posted

Julien Zylberman (Dec 09 2024).
Abstract: While many classical algorithms rely on Laplace transforms, it has remained an open question whether these operations could be implemented efficiently on quantum computers. In this work, we introduce the Quantum Laplace Transform (QLT), which enables the implementation of N×NN\times N discrete Laplace transforms on quantum states encoded in log2(N)\lceil \log_2(N)\rceil-qubits. In many cases, the associated quantum circuits have a depth that scales with NN as O(log(log(N)))O(\log(\log(N))) and a size that scales as O(log(N))O(\log(N)), requiring exponentially fewer operations and double-exponentially less computational time than their classical counterparts. These efficient scalings open the possibility of developing a new class of quantum algorithms based on Laplace transforms, with potential applications in physics, engineering, chemistry, machine learning, and finance.

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Jannes Stubbemann

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Posted by stubbi

This sounds indeed very interesting! Is there anyone with more insights on this?

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