nLab T gate

Redirected from "T gates".

Context

Quantum systems

quantum logic


quantum physics


quantum probability theoryobservables and states


quantum information


quantum technology


quantum computing

Contents

Idea

In quantum information theory and quantum computing, by the T-gate and the S-gate one refers to the quantum gates acting on single qbits that in the defining measurement-basis {|0,|1}\big\{ {\vert 0 \rangle}, {\vert 1 \rangle} \big\} are given by the 2×22 \times 2 complex matrices

T=[1 0 0 e πi/4] T \;=\; \left[ \begin{array}{cc} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & e^{\pi \mathrm{i}/4} \end{array} \right]

and

S=T 2=[1 0 0 i], S \;=\; T^2 \;=\; \left[ \begin{array}{cc} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & \mathrm{i} \end{array} \right] \mathrlap{\,,}

respectively, where “i\mathrm{i}” denotes the imaginary unit.

In particular, the Pauli Z-gate is decomposable into these gates as

Z=S 2=T 4. Z \;=\; S^2 \;=\; T^4 \,.

Remark

Beware of these alternative names and their subtleties:

  • The T-gate is also known as the “π/8\pi/8-gate” (e.g. in Nielsen & Chuang 2000 p xxx), even though the phase rotation is by π/4\pi/4 – but differs by only a global phase from the R Z(π/8)R_Z(\pi/8) rotation gate.

  • The S-gate is also known as the “phase gate”, but that term is ambiguous.

References

Last revised on February 8, 2025 at 09:29:35. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.