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On Performance and Limitations of NISQ Hardware for Simulations of Quantum Wave Packet Dynamics

Tamila Kuanysheva, Jonathan Andrade-Plascencia, Jayakrushna Sahoo, Brian Kendrick, Dmitri Babikov·May 19, 2026
Quantum Physics

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Abstract

Digital quantum simulation offers a promising route for studying quantum dynamics, but efficient operator representations and circuit depth remain key challenges for near-term hardware. We investigate one-dimensional wave packet dynamics using a grid-based encoding of the wave function onto qubit registers. Time evolution is implemented via split-operator approach, with kinetic energy operator applied using Quantum Fourier Transform (QFT) with polynomial scaling and potential energy operator expressed through commuting Pauli-Z gates, improving accuracy and enabling incorporation of arbitrary discretized potentials. While the full Pauli decomposition of Hamiltonian scales exponentially as O(4^n ), the present approach reduces the operator scaling to O(2^n) for n qubits. We benchmark this approach on classical simulators and quantum hardware (IBM Quantum and IonQ) for two- to five-qubit implementations. For two- and three-qubit cases, all platforms qualitatively reproduce the benchmarked dynamics; at larger qubit counts, the IBM results deviate more strongly, whereas IonQ remains closer to the benchmark.

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