kubits
Kubits are a theoretical unit of quantum information used in a generalized model of quantum computing that extends the concept of a qubit to a k-dimensional system. A kubit, sometimes called a k-ary quantum unit, has a state in a k-dimensional Hilbert space and can be described by a superposition sum_{i=0}^{k-1} a_i |i>. The amplitudes a_i satisfy sum|a_i|^2 = 1. When measured in the computational basis, the kubit's outcome is one of the k basis states with probability |a_i|^2.
Two or more kubits can be entangled, producing high-dimensional entangled states such as generalized Bell states.
Information content: a single kubit carries log2(k) bits of classical information in ideal conditions, though no
In theory, kubits have potential advantages for certain tasks, such as more compact representations of data