Free Mode Removal and Mode Decoupling for Simulating General
Superconducting Quantum Circuits
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2011.10564v3
- Date: Wed, 5 May 2021 19:09:57 GMT
- Title: Free Mode Removal and Mode Decoupling for Simulating General
Superconducting Quantum Circuits
- Authors: Dawei Ding, Hsiang-Sheng Ku, Yaoyun Shi, Hui-Hai Zhao
- Abstract summary: We consider and solve two issues involved in simulating general superconducting circuits.
One is the handling of free modes in the circuit, that is, circuit modes with no potential term in the Hamiltonian.
The other is the challenge of simulating strongly coupled multimode circuits.
- Score: 4.568911586155097
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Superconducting quantum circuits is one of the leading candidates for a
universal quantum computer. Designing novel qubit and multiqubit
superconducting circuits requires the ability to simulate and analyze the
properties of a general circuit. In particular, going outside the transmon
approach, we cannot make assumptions on anharmonicity, thus precluding blackbox
quantization approaches and necessitating the formal circuit quantization
approach. We consider and solve two issues involved in simulating general
superconducting circuits. One of the issues is the handling of free modes in
the circuit, that is, circuit modes with no potential term in the Hamiltonian.
Another issue is circuit size, namely the challenge of simulating strongly
coupled multimode circuits. The main mathematical tool we use to address these
issues is the linear canonical transformation in the setting of quantum
mechanics. We address the first issue by giving a provably correct algorithm
for removing free modes by performing a linear canonical transformation to
completely decouple the free modes from other circuit modes. We address the
second by giving a series of different linear canonical transformations to
reduce intermode couplings, thereby reducing the problem to the weakly coupled
case and greatly mitigating the overhead for classical simulation. We benchmark
our decoupling methods by applying them to the circuit of two inductively
coupled fluxonium qubits, obtaining several orders of magnitude reduction in
the size of the Hilbert space that needs to be simulated.
Related papers
- Simulating Quantum Circuits by Model Counting [0.0]
We show for the first time that a strong simulation of universal quantum circuits can be efficiently tackled through weighted model counting.
Our work paves the way to apply the existing array of powerful classical reasoning tools to realize efficient quantum circuit compilation.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-03-11T22:40:15Z) - Flux-charge symmetric theory of superconducting circuits [0.0]
We present a theory of circuit quantization that treats charges and flux on a manifestly symmetric footing.
For planar circuits, known circuit dualities are a natural canonical transformation on the classical phase space.
We discuss the extent to which such circuit dualities generalize to non-planar circuits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-01-16T18:18:52Z) - Symplectic geometry and circuit quantization [0.0]
We present a Hamiltonian formulation of non-dissipative electrodynamic circuits.
We show how to re-derive known results from our formalism, and provide an efficient algorithm for quantizing circuits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-04-17T18:02:35Z) - Quantum emulation of the transient dynamics in the multistate
Landau-Zener model [50.591267188664666]
We study the transient dynamics in the multistate Landau-Zener model as a function of the Landau-Zener velocity.
Our experiments pave the way for more complex simulations with qubits coupled to an engineered bosonic mode spectrum.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-11-26T15:04:11Z) - Gaussian initializations help deep variational quantum circuits escape
from the barren plateau [87.04438831673063]
Variational quantum circuits have been widely employed in quantum simulation and quantum machine learning in recent years.
However, quantum circuits with random structures have poor trainability due to the exponentially vanishing gradient with respect to the circuit depth and the qubit number.
This result leads to a general belief that deep quantum circuits will not be feasible for practical tasks.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-17T15:06:40Z) - Circuit connectivity boosts by quantum-classical-quantum interfaces [0.4194295877935867]
High-connectivity circuits are a major roadblock for current quantum hardware.
We propose a hybrid classical-quantum algorithm to simulate such circuits without swap-gate ladders.
We numerically show the efficacy of our method for a Bell-state circuit for two increasingly distant qubits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-09T19:00:02Z) - An Algebraic Quantum Circuit Compression Algorithm for Hamiltonian
Simulation [55.41644538483948]
Current generation noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computers are severely limited in chip size and error rates.
We derive localized circuit transformations to efficiently compress quantum circuits for simulation of certain spin Hamiltonians known as free fermions.
The proposed numerical circuit compression algorithm behaves backward stable and scales cubically in the number of spins enabling circuit synthesis beyond $mathcalO(103)$ spins.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-08-06T19:38:03Z) - Canonical Quantization of Superconducting Circuits [0.0]
We develop mathematically consistent and precise Hamiltonian models to describe ideal superconducting networks.
We pave the way on how to quantize general frequency-dependent gyrators and circulators coupled to both transmission lines and other lumped-element networks.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-19T15:58:16Z) - Simulating nonnative cubic interactions on noisy quantum machines [65.38483184536494]
We show that quantum processors can be programmed to efficiently simulate dynamics that are not native to the hardware.
On noisy devices without error correction, we show that simulation results are significantly improved when the quantum program is compiled using modular gates.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-04-15T05:16:24Z) - Hardware-Encoding Grid States in a Non-Reciprocal Superconducting
Circuit [62.997667081978825]
We present a circuit design composed of a non-reciprocal device and Josephson junctions whose ground space is doubly degenerate and the ground states are approximate codewords of the Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill (GKP) code.
We find that the circuit is naturally protected against the common noise channels in superconducting circuits, such as charge and flux noise, implying that it can be used for passive quantum error correction.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-02-18T16:45:09Z) - Efficient classical simulation of random shallow 2D quantum circuits [104.50546079040298]
Random quantum circuits are commonly viewed as hard to simulate classically.
We show that approximate simulation of typical instances is almost as hard as exact simulation.
We also conjecture that sufficiently shallow random circuits are efficiently simulable more generally.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2019-12-31T19:00:00Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.