Strongly Universal Reversible Gate Sets

  • Timothy Boykett
  • , Ville Salo
  • , Jarkko Kari

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference proceedingspeer-review

Abstract

It is well-known that the Toffoli gate and the negation gate together yield a universal gate set, in the sense that every permutation of {0,1}n can be implemented as a composition of these gates. Since every bit operation that does not use all of the bits performs an even permutation, we need to use at least one auxiliary bit to perform every permutation, and it is known that one bit is indeed enough. Without auxiliary bits, all even permutations can be implemented. We generalize these results to non-binary logic: For any finite set A, a finite gate set can generate all even permutations of An for all n, without any auxiliary symbols. This directly implies the previously published result that a finite gate set can generate all permutations of An when the cardinality of A is odd, and that one auxiliary symbol is necessary and sufficient to obtain all permutations when the cardinality of A is even. We also consider the conservative case, that is, those permutations of An that preserve the weight of the input word. The weight is the vector that records how many times each symbol occurs in the word. It turns out that no finite conservative gate set can, for all n, implement all conservative even permutations of An without auxiliary bits. But we provide a finite gate set that can implement all those conservative permutations that are even within each weight class of An.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationReversible Computation 8th International Conference, RC 2016, Bologna, Italy, July 7-8, 2016, Proceedings
Editors Simon Devitt, Ivan Lanese
PublisherSpringer
Pagespp 239-254
Number of pages16
Volume9720
ISBN (Print)978-3-319-40577-3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2016

Publication series

NameLecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS)

Fields of science

  • 101 Mathematics
  • 101001 Algebra
  • 101005 Computer algebra
  • 101013 Mathematical logic
  • 102031 Theoretical computer science

JKU Focus areas

  • Computation in Informatics and Mathematics
  • Engineering and Natural Sciences (in general)

Cite this