English

Perturbative quantum simulation

Quantum Physics 2022-09-29 v2

Abstract

Approximation based on perturbation theory is the foundation for most of the quantitative predictions of quantum mechanics, whether in quantum many-body physics, chemistry, quantum field theory or other domains. Quantum computing provides an alternative to the perturbation paradigm, yet state-of-the-art quantum processors with tens of noisy qubits are of limited practical utility. Here, we introduce perturbative quantum simulation, which combines the complementary strengths of the two approaches, enabling the solution of large practical quantum problems using limited noisy intermediate-scale quantum hardware. The use of a quantum processor eliminates the need to identify a solvable unperturbed Hamiltonian, while the introduction of perturbative coupling permits the quantum processor to simulate systems larger than the available number of physical qubits. We present an explicit perturbative expansion that mimics the Dyson series expansion and involves only local unitary operations, and show its optimality over other expansions under certain conditions. We numerically benchmark the method for interacting bosons, fermions, and quantum spins in different topologies, and study different physical phenomena, such as information propagation, charge-spin separation, and magnetism, on systems of up to 4848 qubits only using an 8+18+1 qubit quantum hardware. We experimentally demonstrate our scheme on the IBM quantum cloud, verifying its noise robustness and illustrating its potential for benchmarking large quantum processors with smaller ones.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2106.05938,
  title  = {Perturbative quantum simulation},
  author = {Jinzhao Sun and Suguru Endo and Huiping Lin and Patrick Hayden and Vlatko Vedral and Xiao Yuan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2106.05938},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

39 pages, 12 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-24T03:04:15.052Z