Improving Hamiltonian encodings with the Gray code

Olivia Di Matteo, Anna McCoy, Peter Gysbers, Takayuki Miyagi, R. M. Woloshyn, and Petr Navrátil
Phys. Rev. A 103, 042405 – Published 2 April 2021

Abstract

Due to the limitations of present-day quantum hardware, it is especially critical to design algorithms that make the best possible use of available resources. When simulating quantum many-body systems on a quantum computer, straightforward encodings that transform many-body Hamiltonians into qubit Hamiltonians use N of the available basis states of an N-qubit system, whereas 2N are in theory available. We explore an efficient encoding that uses the entire set of basis states, where terms in the Hamiltonian are mapped to qubit operators with a Hamiltonian that acts on the basis states in Gray code order. This encoding is applied to the commonly studied problem of finding the ground-state energy of a deuteron with a simulated variational quantum eigensolver (VQE). It is compared to a standard “one-hot” encoding, and various trade-offs that arise are analyzed. The energy distribution of VQE solutions has smaller variance than the one obtained by the one-hot encoding even in the presence of simulated hardware noise, despite an increase in the number of measurements. The reduced number of qubits and a shorter-depth variational Ansatz enables the encoding of larger problems on current-generation machines. This encoding also demonstrates improvements for simulating time evolution of the same system, producing circuits for the evolution operators with reduced depth and roughly half the number of gates compared to a one-hot encoding.

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  • Received 13 August 2020
  • Revised 12 January 2021
  • Accepted 16 March 2021

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.103.042405

©2021 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Quantum Information, Science & TechnologyNuclear Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Olivia Di Matteo1, Anna McCoy1, Peter Gysbers1,2, Takayuki Miyagi1, R. M. Woloshyn1, and Petr Navrátil1

  • 1TRIUMF, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 2A3, Canada
  • 2Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z1, Canada

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Issue

Vol. 103, Iss. 4 — April 2021

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