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Efficient quantum implementation of 2+1 U(1) lattice gauge theories with Gauss law constraints

The study of real-time evolution of lattice quantum field theories using classical computers is known to scale exponentially with the number of lattice sites. Due to a fundamentally different computational strategy, quantum computers hold the promise of allowing for detailed studies of these dynamic...

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Autores principales: Kane, Christopher, Grabowska, Dorota M., Nachman, Benjamin, Bauer, Christian W.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2841797
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author Kane, Christopher
Grabowska, Dorota M.
Nachman, Benjamin
Bauer, Christian W.
author_facet Kane, Christopher
Grabowska, Dorota M.
Nachman, Benjamin
Bauer, Christian W.
author_sort Kane, Christopher
collection CERN
description The study of real-time evolution of lattice quantum field theories using classical computers is known to scale exponentially with the number of lattice sites. Due to a fundamentally different computational strategy, quantum computers hold the promise of allowing for detailed studies of these dynamics from first principles. However, much like with classical computations, it is important that quantum algorithms do not have a cost that scales exponentially with the volume. Recently, it was shown how to break the exponential scaling of a naive implementation of a U(1) gauge theory in two spatial dimensions through an operator redefinition. In this work, we describe modifications to how operators must be sampled in the new operator basis to keep digitization errors small. We compare the precision of the energies and plaquette expectation value between the two operator bases and find they are comparable. Additionally, we provide an explicit circuit construction for the Suzuki-Trotter implementation of the theory using the Walsh function formalism. The gate count scaling is studied as a function of the lattice volume, for both exact circuits and approximate circuits where rotation gates with small arguments have been dropped. We study the errors from finite Suzuki-Trotter time-step, circuit approximation, and quantum noise in a calculation of an explicit observable using IBMQ superconducting qubit hardware. We find the gate count scaling for the approximate circuits can be further reduced by up to a power of the volume without introducing larger errors.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2022
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spelling cern-28417972023-10-12T05:37:41Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2841797engKane, ChristopherGrabowska, Dorota M.Nachman, BenjaminBauer, Christian W.Efficient quantum implementation of 2+1 U(1) lattice gauge theories with Gauss law constraintshep-phParticle Physics - Phenomenologyhep-latParticle Physics - Latticequant-phGeneral Theoretical PhysicsThe study of real-time evolution of lattice quantum field theories using classical computers is known to scale exponentially with the number of lattice sites. Due to a fundamentally different computational strategy, quantum computers hold the promise of allowing for detailed studies of these dynamics from first principles. However, much like with classical computations, it is important that quantum algorithms do not have a cost that scales exponentially with the volume. Recently, it was shown how to break the exponential scaling of a naive implementation of a U(1) gauge theory in two spatial dimensions through an operator redefinition. In this work, we describe modifications to how operators must be sampled in the new operator basis to keep digitization errors small. We compare the precision of the energies and plaquette expectation value between the two operator bases and find they are comparable. Additionally, we provide an explicit circuit construction for the Suzuki-Trotter implementation of the theory using the Walsh function formalism. The gate count scaling is studied as a function of the lattice volume, for both exact circuits and approximate circuits where rotation gates with small arguments have been dropped. We study the errors from finite Suzuki-Trotter time-step, circuit approximation, and quantum noise in a calculation of an explicit observable using IBMQ superconducting qubit hardware. We find the gate count scaling for the approximate circuits can be further reduced by up to a power of the volume without introducing larger errors.arXiv:2211.10497CERN-TH-2022-195oai:cds.cern.ch:28417972022-11-18
spellingShingle hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
hep-lat
Particle Physics - Lattice
quant-ph
General Theoretical Physics
Kane, Christopher
Grabowska, Dorota M.
Nachman, Benjamin
Bauer, Christian W.
Efficient quantum implementation of 2+1 U(1) lattice gauge theories with Gauss law constraints
title Efficient quantum implementation of 2+1 U(1) lattice gauge theories with Gauss law constraints
title_full Efficient quantum implementation of 2+1 U(1) lattice gauge theories with Gauss law constraints
title_fullStr Efficient quantum implementation of 2+1 U(1) lattice gauge theories with Gauss law constraints
title_full_unstemmed Efficient quantum implementation of 2+1 U(1) lattice gauge theories with Gauss law constraints
title_short Efficient quantum implementation of 2+1 U(1) lattice gauge theories with Gauss law constraints
title_sort efficient quantum implementation of 2+1 u(1) lattice gauge theories with gauss law constraints
topic hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
hep-lat
Particle Physics - Lattice
quant-ph
General Theoretical Physics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2841797
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