Magic State Distillation and Gate Compilation in Quantum Algorithms for Quantum Chemistry
Abstract
Quantum algorithms for quantum chemistry map the dynamics of electrons in a molecule to the dynamics of a coupled spin system. To reach chemical accuracy for interesting molecules, a large number of quantum gates must be applied which implies the need for quantum error correction and fault-tolerant quantum computation. Arbitrary fault-tolerant operations can be constructed from a small, universal set of fault-tolerant operations by gate compilation. Quantum chemistry algorithms are compiled by decomposing the dynamics of the coupled spin-system using a Trotter formula, synthesizing the decomposed dynamics using Clifford operations and single-qubit rotations, and finally approximating the single-qubit rotations by a sequence of fault-tolerant single-qubit gates. Certain fault-tolerant gates rely on the preparation of specific single-qubit states referred to as magic states. As a result, gate compilation and magic state distillation are critical for solving quantum chemistry problems on a quantum computer. We review recent progress that has improved the efficiency of gate compilation and magic state distillation by orders of magnitude.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1501.01298,
title = {Magic State Distillation and Gate Compilation in Quantum Algorithms for Quantum Chemistry},
author = {Colin J. Trout and Kenneth R. Brown},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1501.01298},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
17 pages, 3 figures, 1 table in Int. J. Quantum Chem. 2014