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Autori principali: Kechedzhi, K., Isakov, S. V., Mandrà, S., Villalonga, B., Mi, X., Boixo, S., Smelyanskiy, V.
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2023
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.15970
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author Kechedzhi, K.
Isakov, S. V.
Mandrà, S.
Villalonga, B.
Mi, X.
Boixo, S.
Smelyanskiy, V.
author_facet Kechedzhi, K.
Isakov, S. V.
Mandrà, S.
Villalonga, B.
Mi, X.
Boixo, S.
Smelyanskiy, V.
contents Today's experimental noisy quantum processors can compete with and surpass all known algorithms on state-of-the-art supercomputers for the computational benchmark task of Random Circuit Sampling [1-5]. Additionally, a circuit-based quantum simulation of quantum information scrambling [6], which measures a local observable, has already outperformed standard full wave function simulation algorithms, e.g., exact Schrodinger evolution and Matrix Product States (MPS). However, this experiment has not yet surpassed tensor network contraction for computing the value of the observable. Based on those studies, we provide a unified framework that utilizes the underlying effective circuit volume to explain the tradeoff between the experimentally achievable signal-to-noise ratio for a specific observable, and the corresponding computational cost. We apply this framework to recent quantum processor experiments of Random Circuit Sampling [5], quantum information scrambling [6], and a Floquet circuit unitary [7]. This allows us to reproduce the results of Ref. [7] in less than one second per data point using one GPU.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2306_15970
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Effective quantum volume, fidelity and computational cost of noisy quantum processing experiments
Kechedzhi, K.
Isakov, S. V.
Mandrà, S.
Villalonga, B.
Mi, X.
Boixo, S.
Smelyanskiy, V.
Quantum Physics
Today's experimental noisy quantum processors can compete with and surpass all known algorithms on state-of-the-art supercomputers for the computational benchmark task of Random Circuit Sampling [1-5]. Additionally, a circuit-based quantum simulation of quantum information scrambling [6], which measures a local observable, has already outperformed standard full wave function simulation algorithms, e.g., exact Schrodinger evolution and Matrix Product States (MPS). However, this experiment has not yet surpassed tensor network contraction for computing the value of the observable. Based on those studies, we provide a unified framework that utilizes the underlying effective circuit volume to explain the tradeoff between the experimentally achievable signal-to-noise ratio for a specific observable, and the corresponding computational cost. We apply this framework to recent quantum processor experiments of Random Circuit Sampling [5], quantum information scrambling [6], and a Floquet circuit unitary [7]. This allows us to reproduce the results of Ref. [7] in less than one second per data point using one GPU.
title Effective quantum volume, fidelity and computational cost of noisy quantum processing experiments
topic Quantum Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.15970