Well-conditioned multi-product formulas for hardware-friendly
Hamiltonian simulation
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2207.11268v3
- Date: Mon, 24 Jul 2023 12:27:21 GMT
- Title: Well-conditioned multi-product formulas for hardware-friendly
Hamiltonian simulation
- Authors: Almudena Carrera Vazquez and Daniel J. Egger and David Ochsner and
Stefan Woerner
- Abstract summary: We show how to design MPFs that do not amplify the hardware and sampling errors, and demonstrate their performance.
We observe an error reduction of up to an order of magnitude when compared to a product formula approach by suppressing hardware noise with Pauli Twirling, pulse efficient transpilation, and a novel zero-noise extrapolation based on scaled cross-resonance pulses.
- Score: 1.433758865948252
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Simulating the time-evolution of a Hamiltonian is one of the most promising
applications of quantum computers. Multi-Product Formulas (MPFs) are well
suited to replace standard product formulas since they scale better with
respect to time and approximation errors. Hamiltonian simulation with MPFs was
first proposed in a fully quantum setting using a linear combination of
unitaries. Here, we analyze and demonstrate a hybrid quantum-classical approach
to MPFs that classically combines expectation values evaluated with a quantum
computer. This has the same approximation bounds as the fully quantum MPFs,
but, in contrast, requires no additional qubits, no controlled operations, and
is not probabilistic. We show how to design MPFs that do not amplify the
hardware and sampling errors, and demonstrate their performance. In particular,
we illustrate the potential of our work by theoretically analyzing the benefits
when applied to a classically intractable spin-boson model, and by computing
the dynamics of the transverse field Ising model using a classical simulator as
well as quantum hardware. We observe an error reduction of up to an order of
magnitude when compared to a product formula approach by suppressing hardware
noise with Pauli Twirling, pulse efficient transpilation, and a novel
zero-noise extrapolation based on scaled cross-resonance pulses. The MPF
methodology reduces the circuit depth and may therefore represent an important
step towards quantum advantage for Hamiltonian simulation on noisy hardware.
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