Christino Tamon

2papers

2 Papers

NASep 18, 2011
Tensor and Matrix Inversions with Applications

Michael Brazell, Na Li, Carmeliza Navasca et al.

Higher order tensor inversion is possible for even order. We have shown that a tensor group endowed with the Einstein (contracted) product is isomorphic to the general linear group of degree $n$. With the isomorphic group structures, we derived new tensor decompositions which we have shown to be related to the well-known canonical polyadic decomposition and multilinear SVD. Moreover, within this group structure framework, multilinear systems are derived, specifically, for solving high dimensional PDEs and large discrete quantum models. We also address multilinear systems which do not fit the framework in the least-squares sense, that is, when the tensor has an odd number of modes or when the tensor has distinct dimensions in each modes. With the notion of tensor inversion, multilinear systems are solvable. Numerically we solve multilinear systems using iterative techniques, namely biconjugate gradient and Jacobi methods in tensor format.

QUANT-PHNov 5, 2019
A Note on Quantum Markov Models

Christino Tamon, Weichen Xie

The study of Markov models is central to control theory and machine learning. A quantum analogue of partially observable Markov decision process was studied in (Barry, Barry, and Aaronson, Phys. Rev. A, 90, 2014). It was proved that goal-state reachability is undecidable in the quantum setting, whereas it is decidable classically. In contrast to this classical-to-quantum transition from decidable to undecidable, we observe that the problem of approximating the optimal policy which maximizes the average discounted reward over an infinite horizon remains decidable in the quantum setting. Given that most relevant problems related to Markov decision process are undecidable classically (which immediately implies undecidability in the quantum case), this provides one of the few examples where the quantum problem is tractable.