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Algebraic Compression of Quantum Circuits for Hamiltonian Evolution

ORAL

Abstract

Unitary evolution under a time dependent Hamiltonian is a key component of simulation on quantum hardware. Synthesizing the corresponding quantum circuit is typically done by breaking the evolution into small time steps, also known as Trotterization, which leads to circuits whose depth scales with the number of steps. When the circuit elements are limited to a subset of $SU(4)$ --- or equivalently, when the Hamiltonian may be mapped onto free fermionic models --- several identities exist that combine and simplify the circuit. Based on this, we present an algorithm that compresses the Trotter steps into a single block of quantum gates. This results in a fixed depth time evolution for certain classes of Hamiltonians. We explicitly show how this algorithm works for several spin models and free fermion models of any dimension, and demonstrate its use for adiabatic state preparation of the 1-D transverse field Ising model and simulation of several 2-D free fermion models.

Publication: [1] Kökcü, Efekan, Daan Camps, Lindsay Bassman, James K. Freericks, Wibe A. de Jong, Roel Van Beeumen, and Alexander F. Kemper. "Algebraic Compression of Quantum Circuits for Hamiltonian Evolution." arXiv preprint arXiv:2108.03282 (2021).<br><br>[2] Camps, Daan, Efekan Kökcü, Lindsay Bassman, Wibe A. de Jong, Alexander F. Kemper, and Roel Van Beeumen. "An Algebraic Quantum Circuit Compression Algorithm for Hamiltonian Simulation." arXiv preprint arXiv:2108.03283 (2021).

Presenters

  • Efekan Kökcü

    North Carolina State University

Authors

  • Efekan Kökcü

    North Carolina State University

  • Daan Camps

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Lindsay Bassman

    Lawrence Berkeley Lab, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • James K Freericks

    Georgetown University

  • Bert A de Jong

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, LBNL

  • Roel Van Beeumen

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Alexander F Kemper

    North Carolina State University