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Strategies for simulating adiabatic time evolution on noisy quantum computers

ORAL

Abstract

Recent experiments on quantum hardware are beginning to show advantage, although in very strict cases, over classical computers. While these novel qubits are being developed, it is instructive to study their dynamics on available noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) hardware. Adiabatic time evolution has emerged in various application sets in quantum simulation. They range from simulating time evolution of Hamiltonians to solving optimization problems where the solution is obtained through simulating a slowly varying Hamiltonian that evolves a known ground state into an unknown desired ground state. We study various strategies for breaking down the time evolution into single-qubit and two-qubit operations with a special emphasis on error analysis of Trotter-Suzuki expansion, adiabatic conditions, and hardware error. We focus on a few sample systems such as the Ising chain as well as the Fermi-Hubbard Hamiltonians.

Presenters

  • Weixin Lu

    New York University

Authors

  • Weixin Lu

    New York University

  • Jaewoo Lee

    Brown University

  • Seyed Mohammad Farzaneh

    New York University (NYU)

  • Bassel H Elfeky

    New York University (NYU), New York University

  • Nicholas T Bronn

    IBM TJ Watson Research Center

  • Javad Shabani

    New York University (NYU), New York University