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by elashri
557 days ago
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I have doubt that anyone with a high school maths would even understand any of these (2023 MSc QM level Oxford exam) [1] . but reading the original source on the study [2] it seems like it is not this or any of what we expect. > This article is concerned with a new language for quantum, to which we refer as quantum picturalism (QPict) [5]. It
is the subject of two books written by some of the authors, respectively entitled Picturing Quantum Processes [10] and
Quantum in Pictures (QiP) [9]. The first one is the text book of an Oxford University postgraduate course that has been
running for well over ten years now. The second one, remarkably, has no mathematical prerequisites beyond what is already
taught to 6-7 year olds in the UK, namely angles [1] https://mmathphys.physics.ox.ac.uk/sitefiles/advanced-quantu... [2] https://oxford24.github.io/assets/act-papers/49_high_schoole... |
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String diagrams of category theory potentially make working with invariants easier by embedding them in graphical transformations, so they "just maintain themselves". Eg, electric circuit laws.[2] Or here, ZX-calculus/diagrams for QM.[3]
[2] https://arxiv.org/pdf/2106.07763 [3] Medium article: https://medium.com/quantinuum/how-zx-calculus-reveals-the-lo... ; A taste (guest lecture notes): https://arxiv.org/pdf/2303.03163 ; old slides https://www.cs.ox.ac.uk/people/aleks.kissinger/slides/pdf/ak... ; ZX-calculus for the working quantum computer scientist (2020; 90+ pages) https://arxiv.org/pdf/2012.13966