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Entanglement is considered to be one of the primary reasons for why quantum algorithms are more efficient than their classical counterparts for certain computational tasks. The global multipartite entanglement of the multiqubit states in Grovers search algorithm can be quantified using the geometric measure of entanglement (GME). Rossi {em et al.} (Phys. Rev. A textbf{87}, 022331 (2013)) found that the entanglement dynamics is scale invariant for large $n$. Namely, the GME does not depend on the number $n$ of qubits; rather, it only depends on the ratio of iteration $k$ to the total iteration. In this paper, we discuss the optimization of the GME for large $n$. We prove that ``the GME is scale invariant does not always hold. We show that there is generally a turning point that can be computed in terms of the number of marked states and their Hamming weights during the curve of the GME. The GME is scale invariant prior to the turning point. However, the GME is not scale invariant after the turning point since it also depends on $n$ and the marked states.
Grovers quantum algorithm improves any classical search algorithm. We show how random Gaussian noise at each step of the algorithm can be modelled easily because of the exact recursion formulas available for computing the quantum amplitude in Grovers
We study the entanglement content of the states employed in the Grover algorithm after the first oracle call when a few searched items are concerned. We then construct a link between these initial states and hypergraphs, which provides an illustration of their entanglement properties.
We study the dynamics of two kinds of entanglement, and there interplay. On one hand, the intrinsic entanglement within a central system composed by three two level atoms, and measured by multipartite concurrence, on the other, the entanglement betwe
We question whether the measurement based quantum computing algorithm is in fact Grovers algorithm or simply a similar oracular search method. The two algorithms share several qualitative features especially in the case of the trivial 4 element searc
We report the implementation of Grovers quantum search algorithm in the scalable system of trapped atomic ion quantum bits. Any one of four possible states of a two-qubit memory is marked, and following a single query of the search space, the marked