Abstract

The Quantum State Preparation problem aims to prepare an n-qubit quantum state |ψv=k=02n-1vk|k from the initial state |0n, for a given unit vector v=(v0,v1,v2,v2n-1)TC2n with ||v||2=1. The problem is of fundamental importance in quantum algorithm design, Hamiltonian simulation and quantum machine learning, yet its circuit depth complexity remains open when ancillary qubits are available. In this paper, we study quantum circuits when there are m ancillary qubits available. We construct, for any m, circuits that can prepare |ψvin depth Õ(2nm+n+n) and size O(2n), achieving the optimal value for both measures simultaneously. These results also imply a depth complexity of (4nm+n) for quantum circuits implementing a general n-qubit unitary for any m≤O(2n/n) number of ancillary qubits. This resolves the depth complexity for circuits without ancillary qubits. And for circuits with exponentially many ancillary qubits, our result quadratically improves the currently best upper bound of O(4n) to ˜(2n). Our circuits are deterministic, prepare the state and carry out the unitary precisely, utilize the ancillary qubits tightly and the depths are optimal in a wide parameter regime. The results can be viewed as (optimal) time-space trade-off bounds, which is not only theoretically interesting, but also practically relevant in the current trend that the number of qubits starts to take off, by showing a way to use a large number of qubits to compensate the short qubit lifetime.

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