Abstract

The ability to simulate a fermionic system on a quantum computer is expected to revolutionize chemical engineering, materials design, nuclear physics, to name a few. Thus, optimizing the simulation circuits is of significance in harnessing the power of quantum computers. Here, we address this problem in two aspects. In the fault-tolerant regime, we optimize the Rz and T gate counts along with the ancilla qubit counts required, assuming the use of a product-formula algorithm for implementation. We obtain a savings ratio of two in the gate counts and a savings ratio of eleven in the number of ancilla qubits required over the state of the art. In the pre-fault tolerant regime, we optimize the two-qubit gate counts, assuming the use of the variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) approach. Specific to the latter, we present a framework that enables bootstrapping the VQE progression towards the convergence of the ground-state energy of the fermionic system. This framework, based on perturbation theory, is capable of improving the energy estimate at each cycle of the VQE progression, by about a factor of three closer to the known ground-state energy compared to the standard VQE approach in the test-bed, classically-accessible system of the water molecule. The improved energy estimate in turn results in a commensurate level of savings of quantum resources, such as the number of qubits and quantum gates, required to be within a pre-specified tolerance from the known ground-state energy. We also explore a suite of generalized transformations of fermion to qubit operators and show that resource-requirement savings of up to more than 20%, in small instances, is possible.

Highlights

  • Simulating fermionic matter on a quantum computer has recently been receiving much attention

  • Simulations of fermionic systems on a quantum computer may be classified into two categories: a variational, quantum-classical hybrid simulation [37], suitable for imperfect, pre-fault tolerant quantum computers, and a Hamiltonian dynamics simulation based on pure quantum simulation algorithms [6], typically considered in fault-tolerant (FT) quantum computers

  • Quantum simulations performed by quantum computers have long been thought to be one of the most promising quantum applications that will prove advantageous over classical computers

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Summary

Introduction

Simulating fermionic matter on a quantum computer has recently been receiving much attention. In the context of estimating the ground-state energy of a fermionic system, the former leverages efficient preparation of ansatz states and evaluation of operator expectation values, both enabled by quantum computers. The latter leverages the ability of a quantum computer to efficiently simulate evolution of quantum systems with a local Hamiltonian, which, when combined with quantum phase estimation [47], allows us to evaluate the ground-state energy of the system

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