Less than a million CNOTs should be enough to solve a classically intractable instance of a scientific problem with a quantum circuit

 · Invited

Abstract

The question I will try to answer in this talk is the following: what is the size of the smallest quantum computation capable of solving an instance of a scientifically interesting problem that is intractable for a classical computer? The problem I consider is Hamiltonian dynamics simulation, in the sense of the ability to sample probability distribution given by a state evolved under the target Hamiltonian for a specified time t and accurate to within a specified error epsilon. The core of the talk concerns the development and application of a range of algorithm design, circuit optimization, and hardware/software co-design techniques, the combination of which leads to the reduction in the quantum resource counts provided by pure algorithmic formulations by several orders of magnitude. Specifically, the best physical-level quantum circuit features under 650,000 CNOT gates, and the best fault-tolerant circuit features under 6.8x10^6 T gates. This illustrates that algorithmic and software-level optimizations will be indispensable for practical quantum computing.

*This material was based on work supported by the National Science Foundation, while DM working at the Foundation. Any opinion, finding, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

Presenters

  • Dmitri Maslov

    • IBM

Authors

  • Dmitri Maslov

    • IBM