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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Database Reordering for Compact Grover Oracles with ESOP Minimization
arXiv
Authors: Yusuke Kimura, Yutaka Takita
Year
2026
Paper ID
45480
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
245
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Grover's algorithm searches for data satisfying a desired condition in an unstructured database. This algorithm can search a space of size N in sqrt{N} queries, thereby achieving a quadratic speedup. However, within the Grover oracle circuit that is repeatedly applied, the quantum state preparation circuit - which embeds database information into quantum states - suffers from a large gate count and circuit depth. To address this problem, we propose reducing the quantum state preparation circuit by reordering the database. Specifically, we consider a Quantum Read-Only Memory (QROM), where data are assigned to addresses, and assume that the address assignment of data can be freely permuted. By applying Exclusive Sum-of-Products (ESOP) minimization to the resulting truth table, we reduce the quantum circuit. Although the resulting circuit logic differs from the original, the state preparation remains correct in the sense that every desired datum is encoded at some address. Furthermore, we propose a proxy metric that estimates circuit size without compilation, and combine it with simulated annealing to efficiently find a near-optimal data ordering. In our experiments, an exhaustive search over all orderings for databases of size N=8 reveals that circuit size varies by up to approximately a factor of two depending on the ordering, demonstrating the utility of reordering. Compared with applying ESOP minimization without reordering, simulated annealing reduces the circuit size by approximately 30% and yields circuits close to optimal. For N=64 and 128, simulated annealing is shown to discover smaller circuits compared with random search.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Grover's algorithm searches for data satisfying a desired condition in an unstructured database.
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