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  • Aspuru-Guzik, Alán (4)
  • Kottmann, Jakob S. (4)
  • Kyaw, Thi Ha (4)
  • Alperin-Lea, Sumner (2)
  • Anand, Abhinav (2)
  • Cervera-Lierta, Alba (2)
  • Degroote, Matthias (2)
  • Bharti, Kishor (1)
  • Haug, Tobias (1)
  • Heimonen, Hermanni (1)
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  • 2022 (2)
  • 2021 (2)

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  • Article (4)

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  • English (4)

Keywords

  • Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics (2)
  • Electrical and Electronic Engineering (2)
  • General Physics and Astronomy (2)
  • Materials Science (miscellaneous) (2)
  • Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) (2)

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  • Fakultät für Angewandte Informatik (4)
  • Institut für Informatik (4)
  • Professur für Quantenalgorithmik (4)

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Toward reliability in the NISQ era: robust interval guarantee for quantum measurements on approximate states (2022)
Weber, Maurice ; Anand, Abhinav ; Cervera-Lierta, Alba ; Kottmann, Jakob S. ; Kyaw, Thi Ha ; Li, Bo ; Aspuru-Guzik, Alán ; Zhang, Ce ; Zhao, Zhikuan
Near-term quantum computation holds potential across multiple application domains. However, imperfect preparation and evolution of states due to algorithmic and experimental shortcomings, characteristic in the near-term implementation, would typically result in measurement outcomes deviating from the ideal setting. It is thus crucial for any near-term application to quantify and bound these output errors. We address this need by deriving robustness intervals which are guaranteed to contain the output in the ideal setting. The first type of interval is based on formulating robustness bounds as semidefinite programs, and uses only the first moment and the fidelity to the ideal state. Furthermore, we consider higher statistical moments of the observable and generalize bounds for pure states based on the non-negativity of Gram matrices to mixed states, thus enabling their applicability in the NISQ era where noisy scenarios are prevalent. Finally, we demonstrate our results in the context of the variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) on noisy and noiseless simulations.
Quantum computer-aided design of quantum optics hardware (2021)
Kottmann, Jakob S. ; Krenn, Mario ; Kyaw, Thi Ha ; Alperin-Lea, Sumner ; Aspuru-Guzik, Alán
The parameters of a quantum system grow exponentially with the number of involved quantum particles. Hence, the associated memory requirement to store or manipulate the underlying wavefunction goes well beyond the limit of the best classical computers for quantum systems composed of a few dozen particles, leading to serious challenges in their numerical simulation. This implies that the verification and design of new quantum devices and experiments are fundamentally limited to small system size. It is not clear how the full potential of large quantum systems can be exploited. Here, we present the concept of quantum computer designed quantum hardware and apply it to the field of quantum optics. Specifically, we map complex experimental hardware for high-dimensional, many-body entangled photons into a gate-based quantum circuit. We show explicitly how digital quantum simulation of Boson sampling experiments can be realized. We then illustrate how to design quantum-optical setups for complex entangled photonic systems, such as high-dimensional Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger states and their derivatives. Since photonic hardware is already on the edge of quantum supremacy and the development of gate-based quantum computers is rapidly advancing, our approach promises to be a useful tool for the future of quantum device design.
Mutual information-assisted adaptive variational quantum eigensolver (2021)
Zhang, Zi-Jian ; Kyaw, Thi Ha ; Kottmann, Jakob S. ; Degroote, Matthias ; Aspuru-Guzik, Alán
Adaptive construction of ansatz circuits offers a promising route towards applicable variational quantum eigensolvers on near-term quantum hardware. Those algorithms aim to build up optimal circuits for a certain problem and ansatz circuits are adaptively constructed by selecting and adding entanglers from a predefined pool. In this work, we propose a way to construct entangler pools with reduced size by leveraging classical algorithms. Our method uses mutual information between the qubits in classically approximated ground state to rank and screen the entanglers. The density matrix renormalization group method is employed for classical precomputation in this work. We corroborate our method numerically on small molecules. Our numerical experiments show that a reduced entangler pool with a small portion of the original entangler pool can achieve same numerical accuracy. We believe that our method paves a new way for adaptive construction of ansatz circuits for variational quantum algorithms.
Noisy intermediate-scale quantum algorithms (2022)
Bharti, Kishor ; Cervera-Lierta, Alba ; Kyaw, Thi Ha ; Haug, Tobias ; Alperin-Lea, Sumner ; Anand, Abhinav ; Degroote, Matthias ; Heimonen, Hermanni ; Kottmann, Jakob S. ; Menke, Tim ; Mok, Wai-Keong ; Sim, Sukin ; Kwek, Leong-Chuan ; Aspuru-Guzik, Alán
A universal fault-tolerant quantum computer that can efficiently solve problems such as integer factorization and unstructured database search requires millions of qubits with low error rates and long coherence times. While the experimental advancement toward realizing such devices will potentially take decades of research, noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computers already exist. These computers are composed of hundreds of noisy qubits, i.e., qubits that are not error corrected, and therefore perform imperfect operations within a limited coherence time. In the search for achieving quantum advantage with these devices, algorithms have been proposed for applications in various disciplines spanning physics, machine learning, quantum chemistry, and combinatorial optimization. The overarching goal of such algorithms is to leverage the limited available resources to perform classically challenging tasks. In this review, a thorough summary of NISQ computational paradigms and algorithms is provided. The key structure of these algorithms and their limitations and advantages are discussed. A comprehensive overview of various benchmarking and software tools useful for programming and testing NISQ devices is additionally provided.
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