Invited talk: Twist: Sound Reasoning for Purity and Entanglement in Quantum Programs
Quantum programming languages enable developers to implement algorithms for quantum computers that promise computational breakthroughs in classically intractable tasks. Programming quantum computers requires awareness of entanglement, the phenomenon in which measurement outcomes of qubits are correlated. Entanglement can determine the correctness of algorithms and suitability of programming patterns.
In this work, we formalize purity as a central tool for automating reasoning about entanglement in quantum programs. A pure expression is one whose evaluation is unaffected by the measurement outcomes of qubits that it does not own, implying freedom from entanglement with any other expression in the computation.
We present Twist, the first language that features a type system for sound reasoning about purity. The type system enables the developer to identify pure expressions using type annotations. Twist also features purity assertion operators that state the absence of entanglement in the output of quantum gates. To soundly check these assertions, Twist uses a combination of static analysis and runtime verification.
We evaluate Twist’s type system and analyses on a benchmark suite of quantum programs in simulation, demonstrating that Twist can express quantum algorithms, catch programming errors in them, and support programs that existing languages disallow, while incurring runtime verification overhead of less than 3.5%.
Thu 15 SepDisplayed time zone: Belgrade, Bratislava, Budapest, Ljubljana, Prague change
14:00 - 15:30 | Formalization, verification, and correctnessPLanQC at E3 Chair(s): Ross Duncan Cambridge Quantum Computing | ||
14:00 40mTalk | Invited talk: Twist: Sound Reasoning for Purity and Entanglement in Quantum Programs PLanQC Charles Yuan MIT CSAIL | ||
14:40 25mTalk | Analyzing quantum programs using the power of interaction PLanQC File Attached | ||
15:05 25mTalk | Q*: Implementing Quantum Separation Logic in F* PLanQC Kesha Hietala University of Maryland, Sarah Marshall Microsoft Quantum, Robert Rand University of Chicago, Nikhil Swamy MSR Redmond File Attached |