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Simulating Many-Body Systems with a Projective Quantum Eigensolver

Nicholas H Stair, Francesco A. Evangelista·January 31, 2021·DOI: 10.1103/PRXQuantum.2.030301
Physics

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Abstract

We present a new hybrid quantum-classical algorithm for optimizing unitary coupled-cluster (UCC) wave functions deemed the projective quantum eigensolver (PQE), amenable to near-term noisy quantum hardware. Contrary to variational quantum algorithms, PQE optimizes a trial state using residuals (projections of the Schrödinger equation) rather than energy gradients. We show that the residuals may be evaluated by simply measuring two energy expectation values per element. We also introduce a selected variant of PQE (SPQE) that uses an adaptive ansatz built from arbitrary-order particle-hole operators and circumvents the expensive gradient-based selection procedures used in adaptive variational quantum algorithms. PQE and SPQE are tested on a set of molecular systems covering both the weak and strong correlation regimes, including hydrogen clusters with 4–10 atoms and the BeH2 molecule. When employing a fixed ansatz, we find that PQE can converge UCC wave functions to essentially identical energies as variational optimization while requiring fewer computational resources. A comparison of SPQE and adaptive variational quantum algorithms shows that—for ansätze containing the same number of parameters—the two methods yield results of comparable accuracy. Finally, we show that SPQE performs similar to, and in some cases, better than selected configuration interaction and the density matrix renormalization group on 1–3 dimensional strongly correlated H10 systems.

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