We propose a nonvariational scheme for geometry optimization of molecules for the first-quantized eigensolver, a recently proposed framework for quantum chemistry using the probabilistic imaginary-time evolution (PITE) on a quantum computer. While the electrons in a molecule are treated in the scheme as quantum mechanical particles, the nuclei are treated as classical point charges. We encode both electronic states and candidate molecular geometries as a superposition of many-qubit states, leading to quantum advantage. The histogram formed by outcomes of repeated measurements gives the global minimum of the energy surface. We demonstrate that the circuit depth scales as O (n_e^2 poly(log n_e)) for the electron number n_e, which can be reduced to O (n_e poly(log n_e)) if extra O (n_e log n_e) qubits are available. We corroborate the scheme via numerical simulations. The new efficient scheme will be helpful for achieving scalability of practical quantum chemistry on quantum computers. As a special case of the scheme, a classical system composed only of charged particles is admitted. We also examine the scheme adapted to variational calculations that prioritize saving circuit depths for noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) devices.
@article{arxiv.2210.09883,
title = {Exhaustive search for optimal molecular geometries using imaginary-time evolution on a quantum computer},
author = {Taichi Kosugi and Hirofumi Nishi and Yuichiro Matsushita},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2210.09883},
year = {2023}
}