Sequential quantum simulation of spin chains with a single circuit QED
device
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2308.16229v1
- Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2023 18:00:03 GMT
- Title: Sequential quantum simulation of spin chains with a single circuit QED
device
- Authors: Yuxuan Zhang, Shahin Jahanbani, Ameya Riswadkar, S. Shankar, and
Andrew C. Potter
- Abstract summary: Quantum simulation of many-body systems in materials science and chemistry are promising application areas for quantum computers.
We show how a single-circuit quantum electrodynamics device can be used to simulate the ground state of a highly-entangled quantum many-body spin chain.
We demonstrate that the large state space of the cavity can be used to replace multiple qubits in a qubit-only architecture, and could therefore simplify the design of quantum processors for materials simulation.
- Score: 5.841833052422423
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
- Abstract: Quantum simulation of many-body systems in materials science and chemistry
are promising application areas for quantum computers. However, the limited
scale and coherence of near-term quantum processors pose a significant obstacle
to realizing this potential. Here, we theoretically outline how a
single-circuit quantum electrodynamics (cQED) device, consisting of a transmon
qubit coupled to a long-lived cavity mode, can be used to simulate the ground
state of a highly-entangled quantum many-body spin chain. We exploit recently
developed methods for implementing quantum operations to sequentially build up
a matrix product state (MPS) representation of a many-body state. This approach
re-uses the transmon qubit to read out the state of each spin in the chain and
exploits the large state space of the cavity as a quantum memory encoding
inter-site correlations and entanglement. We show, through simulation, that
analog (pulse-level) control schemes can accurately prepare a known MPS
representation of a quantum critical spin chain in significantly less time than
digital (gate-based) methods, thereby reducing the exposure to decoherence. We
then explore this analog-control approach for the variational preparation of an
unknown ground state. We demonstrate that the large state space of the cavity
can be used to replace multiple qubits in a qubit-only architecture, and could
therefore simplify the design of quantum processors for materials simulation.
We explore the practical limitations of realistic noise and decoherence and
discuss avenues for scaling this approach to more complex problems that
challenge classical computational methods.
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