Efficient Classical Processing of Constant-Depth Time Evolution Circuits in Control Hardware
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2507.12765v2
- Date: Wed, 30 Jul 2025 17:27:14 GMT
- Title: Efficient Classical Processing of Constant-Depth Time Evolution Circuits in Control Hardware
- Authors: Akhil Francis, Abhi D. Rajagopala, Norm M. Tubman, Katherine Klymko, Kasra Nowrouzi,
- Abstract summary: This work focuses on reducing classical processing time via hardware-assisted parameterized circuit execution (PCE) for computing dynamical properties of quantum systems.<n>Implementing this for spin-spin correlation functions in Transverse field XY (up to 6-sites) and Heisenberg spin models (up to 3-sites), we observed a run-time reduction of up to 50% compared to standard compilation methods.
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- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Improving quantum algorithms run-time performance involves several strategies such as reducing the quantum gate counts, decreasing the number of measurements, advancement in QPU technology for faster gate operations, or optimizing the classical processing. This work focuses on the latter, specifically reducing classical processing and compilation time via hardware-assisted parameterized circuit execution (PCE) for computing dynamical properties of quantum systems. PCE was previously validated for QCVV protocols, which leverages structural circuit equivalencies. We demonstrate the applicability of this approach to computing dynamical properties of quantum many-body systems using structurally equivalent time evolution circuits, specifically calculating correlation functions of spin models using constant-depth circuits generated via Cartan decomposition. Implementing this for spin-spin correlation functions in Transverse field XY (up to 6-sites) and Heisenberg spin models (up to 3-sites), we observed a run-time reduction of up to 50\% compared to standard compilation methods. This highlights the adaptability of time-evolution circuit with hardware-assisted PCE to potentially mitigate the classical bottlenecks in near-term quantum algorithms.
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