Abstract. In this paper we extend our 2007 paper, "Comparative Quantum Cosmology: Causality, Singularity, and Boundary Conditions", http://arxiv.org/ ftp/arxiv/papers/0710/0710.5046.pdf, to include consideration of universal expansion, various implications of extendibility and incompleteness in spacetime metrics and, absent the treatment of Feynman diagrams, the use of Penning trap dynamics to describe the Hamiltonians of space-times with no characteristic upper or lower bound.
In this paper we review our earlier work on quantum computing and the Nash
Equilibrium, in particular, tracing the history of the discovery of new Nash
Equilibria and then reviewing the ways in which quantum computing may be
expected to generate new classes of Nash equilibria. We then extend this work
through a substantive analysis of examples provided by Meyer, Flitney, Iqbal
and Weigert and Cheon and Tsutsui with respect to quantized games, quantum game
strategies and the extension of Nash Equilibrium to solvable games in Hilbert
space. Finally, we review earlier work by Sato, Taiji and Ikegami on non-linear
computation and computational classes by way of reference to coherence,
decoherence and quantum computating systems.Comment: 18 Pages, 6th International Conference on Complex Systems. Available
from http://necsi.org/events/iccs6/papers/12dc335ba096f7ee3cf094c55489.pd
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.