The Power of Discrete Quantum Theories
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abstract
We explore the implications of restricting the framework of quantum theory
and quantum computation to finite fields. The simplest proposed theory is
defined over arbitrary finite fields and loses the notion of unitaries. This
makes such theories unnaturally strong, permitting the search of unstructured
databases faster than asymptotically possible in conventional quantum
computing. The next most general approach chooses finite fields with no
solution to x^2+1=0, and thus permits an elegant complex-like representation of
the extended field by adjoining i=sqrt(-1). Quantum theories over these fields
retain the notion of unitaries and --- for particular problem sizes --- allow
the same algorithms as conventional quantum theory. These theories, however,
still support unnaturally strong computations for certain problem sizes, but
the possibility of such phenomena decreases as the size of the field increases.