Abstract

We consider quantum circuits composed of Clifford and $T$ gates. In this context the $T$ gate has a special status since it confers universal computation when added to the (classically simulable) Clifford gates. However it can be very expensive to implement fault-tolerantly. We therefore view this gate as a resource which should be used only when necessary. Given an $n$-qubit unitary $U$ we are interested in computing a circuit that implements it using the minimum possible number of $T$ gates (called the $T$-count of $U$). A related task is to decide if the $T$-count of $U$ is less than or equal to $m$; we consider this problem as a function of $N=2^n$ and $m$. We provide a classical algorithm which solves it using time and space both upper bounded as $\mathcal{O}(N^m \text{poly}(m,N))$. We implemented our algorithm and used it to show that any Clifford+T circuit for the Toffoli or the Fredkin gate requires at least 7 $T$ gates. This implies that the known 7 $T$ gate circuits for these gates are $T$-optimal. We also provide a simple expression for the $T$-count of single-qubit unitaries.

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