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Auteurs principaux: Veske, Doğa, Tüysüz, Cenk, Amico, Mirko, Bronn, Nicholas T., Lanes, Olivia T., Bartos, Imre, Márka, Zsuzsa, Will, Sebastian, Márka, Szabolcs
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2022
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2204.04159
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author Veske, Doğa
Tüysüz, Cenk
Amico, Mirko
Bronn, Nicholas T.
Lanes, Olivia T.
Bartos, Imre
Márka, Zsuzsa
Will, Sebastian
Márka, Szabolcs
author_facet Veske, Doğa
Tüysüz, Cenk
Amico, Mirko
Bronn, Nicholas T.
Lanes, Olivia T.
Bartos, Imre
Márka, Zsuzsa
Will, Sebastian
Márka, Szabolcs
contents State of the art quantum computers have very limited applicability for accurate calculations. Here we report the first experimental demonstration of qubit-based matched filtering for a detection of the gravitational-wave signal from a binary black hole merger. With our implementation on noisy superconducting qubits, we obtained a similar signal-to-noise ratio for the binary black hole merger as achievable with classical computation, providing evidence for the utility of qubits for practically relevant tasks. The algorithm we invented for this application is a Monte Carlo algorithm which uses quantum and classical computation together. It provides a quasi-quadartic speed-up for time-domain convolution, similar to achievable with fast Fourier transform.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2204_04159
institution arXiv
publishDate 2022
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Gravitational-wave matched filtering on a quantum computer
Veske, Doğa
Tüysüz, Cenk
Amico, Mirko
Bronn, Nicholas T.
Lanes, Olivia T.
Bartos, Imre
Márka, Zsuzsa
Will, Sebastian
Márka, Szabolcs
Quantum Physics
Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Computational Complexity
Emerging Technologies
Signal Processing
State of the art quantum computers have very limited applicability for accurate calculations. Here we report the first experimental demonstration of qubit-based matched filtering for a detection of the gravitational-wave signal from a binary black hole merger. With our implementation on noisy superconducting qubits, we obtained a similar signal-to-noise ratio for the binary black hole merger as achievable with classical computation, providing evidence for the utility of qubits for practically relevant tasks. The algorithm we invented for this application is a Monte Carlo algorithm which uses quantum and classical computation together. It provides a quasi-quadartic speed-up for time-domain convolution, similar to achievable with fast Fourier transform.
title Gravitational-wave matched filtering on a quantum computer
topic Quantum Physics
Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Computational Complexity
Emerging Technologies
Signal Processing
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2204.04159