Litcius/Paper detail

Parrondo effect in quantum coin-toss simulations

Joel Weijia Lai, Kang Hao Cheong

2020Physical review. E36 citationsDOI

Abstract

Game A + Game B = Game C. Parrondo's games follow this basic structure where A and B are losing games and C is a winning game-a phenomenon called Parrondo's paradox. These games can take on a wider class of definitions and exhibit these paradoxical results. In this paper, we show three paradoxical cases. (i) The successive "tossing" of a single fair quantum coin gives a biased result, a previously known result. (ii) The random tossing of two quantum coins, each with successive biased expectations, gives an average random walk position of approximately zero. (iii) The sequential periodic tossing of two quantum coins, each with successive negative biased expectations, gives an average random walk with positive expectation. Using these results, we then propose a protocol for identifying and classifying quantum operations that span the same Hilbert space for a two-level quantum system.

Topics & Concepts

Coin flippingQuantumClass (philosophy)Quantum walkMathematicsQuantum pseudo-telepathyRandom walkHilbert spaceDiscrete mathematicsComputer scienceStatistical physicsQuantum processQuantum mechanicsPhysicsPure mathematicsQuantum algorithmStatisticsQuantum dynamicsArtificial intelligenceQuantum Computing Algorithms and ArchitectureQuantum Information and CryptographyQuantum many-body systems