What Limits the Simulation of Quantum Computers?

An ultimate goal of quantum computing is to perform calculations beyond the reach of any classical computer. It is therefore imperative that useful quantum computers be very difficult to simulate classically, otherwise classical computers could be used for the applications envisioned for the quantum...

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Autores principales: Yiqing Zhou, E. Miles Stoudenmire, Xavier Waintal
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Publicado: American Physical Society 2020
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:78e4186ec3f2481a9ef3ef6cf033bd562021-12-02T11:04:36ZWhat Limits the Simulation of Quantum Computers?10.1103/PhysRevX.10.0410382160-3308https://doaj.org/article/78e4186ec3f2481a9ef3ef6cf033bd562020-11-01T00:00:00Zhttp://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.10.041038http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.10.041038https://doaj.org/toc/2160-3308An ultimate goal of quantum computing is to perform calculations beyond the reach of any classical computer. It is therefore imperative that useful quantum computers be very difficult to simulate classically, otherwise classical computers could be used for the applications envisioned for the quantum ones. Perfect quantum computers are unarguably exponentially difficult to simulate: the classical resources required grow exponentially with the number of qubits N or the depth D of the circuit. This difficulty has triggered recent experiments on deep, random circuits that aim to demonstrate that quantum devices may already perform tasks beyond the reach of classical computing. These real quantum computing devices, however, suffer from many sources of decoherence and imprecision which limit the degree of entanglement that can actually be reached to a fraction of its theoretical maximum. They are characterized by an exponentially decaying fidelity F∼(1-ε)^{ND} with an error rate ε per operation as small as ≈1% for current devices with several dozen qubits or even smaller for smaller devices. In this work, we provide new insight on the computing capabilities of real quantum computers by demonstrating that they can be simulated at a tiny fraction of the cost that would be needed for a perfect quantum computer. Our algorithms compress the representations of quantum wave functions using matrix product states, which are able to capture states with low to moderate entanglement very accurately. This compression introduces a finite error rate ε so that the algorithms closely mimic the behavior of real quantum computing devices. The computing time of our algorithm increases only linearly with N and D in sharp contrast with exact simulation algorithms. We illustrate our algorithms with simulations of random circuits for qubits connected in both one- and two-dimensional lattices. We find that ε can be decreased at a polynomial cost in computing power down to a minimum error ε_{∞}. Getting below ε_{∞} requires computing resources that increase exponentially with ε_{∞}/ε. For a two-dimensional array of N=54 qubits and a circuit with control-Z gates, error rates better than state-of-the-art devices can be obtained on a laptop in a few hours. For more complex gates such as a swap gate followed by a controlled rotation, the error rate increases by a factor 3 for similar computing time. Our results suggest that, despite the high fidelity reached by quantum devices, only a tiny fraction (∼10^{-8}) of the system Hilbert space is actually being exploited.Yiqing ZhouE. Miles StoudenmireXavier WaintalAmerican Physical SocietyarticlePhysicsQC1-999ENPhysical Review X, Vol 10, Iss 4, p 041038 (2020)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Physics
QC1-999
spellingShingle Physics
QC1-999
Yiqing Zhou
E. Miles Stoudenmire
Xavier Waintal
What Limits the Simulation of Quantum Computers?
description An ultimate goal of quantum computing is to perform calculations beyond the reach of any classical computer. It is therefore imperative that useful quantum computers be very difficult to simulate classically, otherwise classical computers could be used for the applications envisioned for the quantum ones. Perfect quantum computers are unarguably exponentially difficult to simulate: the classical resources required grow exponentially with the number of qubits N or the depth D of the circuit. This difficulty has triggered recent experiments on deep, random circuits that aim to demonstrate that quantum devices may already perform tasks beyond the reach of classical computing. These real quantum computing devices, however, suffer from many sources of decoherence and imprecision which limit the degree of entanglement that can actually be reached to a fraction of its theoretical maximum. They are characterized by an exponentially decaying fidelity F∼(1-ε)^{ND} with an error rate ε per operation as small as ≈1% for current devices with several dozen qubits or even smaller for smaller devices. In this work, we provide new insight on the computing capabilities of real quantum computers by demonstrating that they can be simulated at a tiny fraction of the cost that would be needed for a perfect quantum computer. Our algorithms compress the representations of quantum wave functions using matrix product states, which are able to capture states with low to moderate entanglement very accurately. This compression introduces a finite error rate ε so that the algorithms closely mimic the behavior of real quantum computing devices. The computing time of our algorithm increases only linearly with N and D in sharp contrast with exact simulation algorithms. We illustrate our algorithms with simulations of random circuits for qubits connected in both one- and two-dimensional lattices. We find that ε can be decreased at a polynomial cost in computing power down to a minimum error ε_{∞}. Getting below ε_{∞} requires computing resources that increase exponentially with ε_{∞}/ε. For a two-dimensional array of N=54 qubits and a circuit with control-Z gates, error rates better than state-of-the-art devices can be obtained on a laptop in a few hours. For more complex gates such as a swap gate followed by a controlled rotation, the error rate increases by a factor 3 for similar computing time. Our results suggest that, despite the high fidelity reached by quantum devices, only a tiny fraction (∼10^{-8}) of the system Hilbert space is actually being exploited.
format article
author Yiqing Zhou
E. Miles Stoudenmire
Xavier Waintal
author_facet Yiqing Zhou
E. Miles Stoudenmire
Xavier Waintal
author_sort Yiqing Zhou
title What Limits the Simulation of Quantum Computers?
title_short What Limits the Simulation of Quantum Computers?
title_full What Limits the Simulation of Quantum Computers?
title_fullStr What Limits the Simulation of Quantum Computers?
title_full_unstemmed What Limits the Simulation of Quantum Computers?
title_sort what limits the simulation of quantum computers?
publisher American Physical Society
publishDate 2020
url https://doaj.org/article/78e4186ec3f2481a9ef3ef6cf033bd56
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