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Gate-Efficient Simulation of Molecular Eigenstates on a Quantum Computer

M. Ganzhorn, D. Egger, P. Barkoutsos, Pauline J. Ollitrault, G. Salis, N. Moll, Andreas Fuhrer, P. Mueller, Stefan Woerner, I. Tavernelli, S. Filipp·September 13, 2018·DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.11.044092
PhysicsMathematics

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Abstract

A key requirement to perform simulations of large quantum systems on near-term quantum hardware is the design of quantum algorithms with short circuit depth that finish within the available coherence time. A way to stay within the limits of coherence is to reduce the number of gates by implementing a gate set that matches the requirements of the specific algorithm of interest directly in hardware. Here, we show that exchange-type gates are a promising choice for simulating molecular eigenstates on near-term quantum devices since these gates preserve the number of excitations in the system. Complementing the theoretical work by Barkoutsos et al. [PRA 98, 022322 (2018)], we report on the experimental implementation of a variational algorithm on a superconducting qubit platform to compute the eigenstate energies of molecular hydrogen. We utilize a parametrically driven tunable coupler to realize exchange-type gates that are configurable in amplitude and phase on two fixed-frequency superconducting qubits. With gate fidelities around 95% we are able to compute the eigenstates within an accuracy of 50 mHartree on average, a limit set by the coherence time of the tunable coupler.

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