Let Each Quantum Bit Choose Its Basis Gates
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2208.13380v2
- Date: Wed, 7 Sep 2022 21:03:22 GMT
- Title: Let Each Quantum Bit Choose Its Basis Gates
- Authors: Sophia Fuhui Lin, Sara Sussman, Casey Duckering, Pranav S. Mundada,
Jonathan M. Baker, Rohan S. Kumar, Andrew A. Houck, Frederic T. Chong
- Abstract summary: Near-term quantum computers are primarily limited by errors in quantum operations (or gates) between two quantum bits (or qubits)
In superconducting technologies, the current state of the art is to implement the same 2Q gate between every pair of qubits.
This work aims to give quantum scientists the ability to run meaningful algorithms with qubit systems that are not perfectly uniform.
- Score: 3.6690675649846396
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Near-term quantum computers are primarily limited by errors in quantum
operations (or gates) between two quantum bits (or qubits). A physical machine
typically provides a set of basis gates that include primitive 2-qubit (2Q) and
1-qubit (1Q) gates that can be implemented in a given technology. 2Q entangling
gates, coupled with some 1Q gates, allow for universal quantum computation. In
superconducting technologies, the current state of the art is to implement the
same 2Q gate between every pair of qubits (typically an XX- or XY-type gate).
This strict hardware uniformity requirement for 2Q gates in a large quantum
computer has made scaling up a time and resource-intensive endeavor in the lab.
We propose a radical idea -- allow the 2Q basis gate(s) to differ between every
pair of qubits, selecting the best entangling gates that can be calibrated
between given pairs of qubits. This work aims to give quantum scientists the
ability to run meaningful algorithms with qubit systems that are not perfectly
uniform. Scientists will also be able to use a much broader variety of novel 2Q
gates for quantum computing. We develop a theoretical framework for identifying
good 2Q basis gates on "nonstandard" Cartan trajectories that deviate from
"standard" trajectories like XX. We then introduce practical methods for
calibration and compilation with nonstandard 2Q gates, and discuss possible
ways to improve the compilation. To demonstrate our methods in a case study, we
simulated both standard XY-type trajectories and faster, nonstandard
trajectories using an entangling gate architecture with far-detuned transmon
qubits. We identify efficient 2Q basis gates on these nonstandard trajectories
and use them to compile a number of standard benchmark circuits such as QFT and
QAOA. Our results demonstrate an 8x improvement over the baseline 2Q gates with
respect to speed and coherence-limited gate fidelity.
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