Pauli group

In physics and mathematics, the Pauli group is a 16-element matrix group
Matrix group
[edit]The Pauli group consists of the 2 × 2 identity matrix and all of the Pauli matrices
- ,
together with the products of these matrices with the factors and :
- .
The Pauli group is generated by the Pauli matrices, and like them it is named after Wolfgang Pauli.
As an abstract group, is the central product of a cyclic group of order 4 and the dihedral group of order 8.[1]
The Pauli group is a representation of the gamma group in three-dimensional Euclidean space. It is not isomorphic to the gamma group; it is less free, in that its chiral element is whereas there is no such relationship for the gamma group.
Pauli algebra
[edit]The Pauli algebra is the algebra of 2 x 2 complex matrices M(2, C) with matrix addition and matrix multiplication. It has a long history beginning with the biquaternions introduced by W. R. Hamilton in his Lectures on Quaternions (1853). The representation with matrices was noted by L. E. Dickson in 1914.[2] Publications by Pauli eventually led to the eponym now in use. Basis elements of the algebra generate the Pauli group.
Quantum computing
[edit]Quantum computing is based on qubits. The Pauli group on qubits, , is the group generated by the operators described above applied to each of qubits in the tensor product Hilbert space . That is,
The order of is since a scalar or factor in any tensor position can be moved to any other position.
References
[edit]- Nielsen, Michael A.; Chuang, Isaac L. (2000). Quantum Computation and Quantum Information. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63235-5. OCLC 43641333.
External links
[edit]- ^ Pauli group on GroupNames
- ^ L. E. Dickson (1914) Linear Algebras, pages 13,4