16 Chapter 17Figure 17.1 Quantum internet graph G with deterministically chosen virtual l...Figure 17.2 Quantum internet graph G with deterministically chosen virtual l...Figure 17.3 Comparison of different routing algorithms on deterministic virt...Figure 17.4 Recursively generated physical graph and virtual graph at the 0‐...Figure 17.5 Recursively generated physical graph and virtual graph at the fi...Figure 17.6 Network example with three switches (boxes with multiple vertica...Figure 17.7 A quantum network protocol stack comprising four layers: physica...Figure 17.8 Setting of layers 1 and 2.Figure 17.9 Settings of layers 3 and 4.Figure 17.10 Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger (GHZ) states are very fragile.Figure 17.11 (a) Static phase, (b) adaptive phase.Figure 17.12 (a) Static phase, (b) adaptive phase.Figure 17.13 The goal of a quantum routing protocol.Figure 17.14 Regions and how they connect.Figure 17.15 The state for connecting nine networks in hierarchical regions ...Figure 17.16 Symmetrizing a network state between regions (shown for a three...Figure 17.17 Example network for illustration of Protocol 2.Figure 17.18 (a) Generating the state |GHZ4〉, (b) generating the state...
Guide
2 Artificial Intelligence and Quantum Computing for Advanced Wireless Networks
4 Preface
7 Index
8 WILEY END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT
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