Provable quantum computational advantage with the cyclic cluster state
ORAL
Abstract
We propose two Bell-type nonlocal games that can be used to prove quantum computational advantage in a hardware-agnostic manner. In these games, the circuit depth needed to prepare a cyclic cluster state and measure a subset of its Pauli stabilizers on a quantum computer is compared to that of classical Boolean circuits with the same gate connectivity. Using a circuit-based trapped-ion quantum computer, we prepare and measure a six-qubit cyclic cluster state with an overall fidelity of 60.6% and 66.4%, before and after correcting measurement-readout errors, respectively. Our experimental results indicate that while this fidelity readily passes conventional (or depth-0) Bell bounds for local hidden variable models, it is on the cusp of demonstrating quantum advantage against depth-1 classical circuits. Our games offer a practical and scalable set of quantitative benchmarks for quantum computers in the pre-fault-tolerant regime as the number of qubits available increases.
–
Publication: Provable quantum computational advantage with the cyclic cluster state (arXiv preprint arXiv:2110.04277v1)
Presenters
-
Austin K Daniel
University of New Mexico
Authors
-
Austin K Daniel
University of New Mexico
-
Yingyue Zhu
University of Maryland, College Park
-
Cinthia H Alderete
Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, University of Maryland, College Park
-
Vikas Buchemmavari
University of New Mexico
-
Alaina Green
Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, University of Maryland, College Park
-
Nhung H Nguyen
University of Maryland, College Park
-
Tyler G Thurtell
University of New Mexico
-
Andrew Zhao
University of New Mexico
-
Norbert M Linke
University of Maryland, College Park
-
Akimasa Miyake
University of New Mexico