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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Quantum Simulation
Quantum Chemistry
Lowering qubit requirements for quantum simulations of fermionic systems
arXiv
Authors: Mark Steudtner, Stephanie Wehner
Year
2017
Paper ID
24397
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
206
Citations
N/A
Abstract
The mapping of fermionic states onto qubit states, as well as the mapping of fermionic Hamiltonian into quantum gates enables us to simulate electronic systems with a quantum computer. Benefiting the understanding of many-body systems in chemistry and physics, quantum simulation is one of the great promises of the coming age of quantum computers. One challenge in realizing simulations on near-term quantum devices is the large number of qubits required by such mappings. In this work, we develop methods that allow us to trade-off qubit requirements against the complexity of the resulting quantum circuit. We first show that any classical code used to map the state of a fermionic Fock space to qubits gives rise to a mapping of fermionic models to quantum gates. As an illustrative example, we present a mapping based on a non-linear classical error correcting code, which leads to significant qubit savings albeit at the expense of additional quantum gates. We proceed to use this framework to present a number of simpler mappings that lead to qubit savings with only a very modest increase in gate difficulty. We discuss the role of symmetries such as particle conservation, and savings that could be obtained if an experimental platform could easily realize multi-controlled gates.
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- The mapping of fermionic states onto qubit states, as well as the mapping of fermionic Hamiltonian into quantum gates enables us to simulate electronic systems with a quantum...
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