English

Parallelizing quantum circuit synthesis

Quantum Physics 2016-10-17 v2

Abstract

Quantum circuit synthesis is the process in which an arbitrary unitary operation is decomposed into a sequence of gates from a universal set, typically one which a quantum computer can implement both efficiently and fault-tolerantly. As physical implementations of quantum computers improve, the need is growing for tools which can effectively synthesize components of the circuits and algorithms they will run. Existing algorithms for exact, multi-qubit circuit synthesis scale exponentially in the number of qubits and circuit depth, leaving synthesis intractable for circuits on more than a handful of qubits. Even modest improvements in circuit synthesis procedures may lead to significant advances, pushing forward the boundaries of not only the size of solvable circuit synthesis problems, but also in what can be realized physically as a result of having more efficient circuits. We present a method for quantum circuit synthesis using deterministic walks. Also termed pseudorandom walks, these are walks in which once a starting point is chosen, its path is completely determined. We apply our method to construct a parallel framework for circuit synthesis, and implement one such version performing optimal TT-count synthesis over the Clifford+TT gate set. We use our software to present examples where parallelization offers a significant speedup on the runtime, as well as directly confirm that the 4-qubit 1-bit full adder has optimal TT-count 7 and TT-depth 3.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1606.07413,
  title  = {Parallelizing quantum circuit synthesis},
  author = {Olivia Di Matteo and Michele Mosca},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1606.07413},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

16 pages, 9 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T14:32:53.666Z