Efficient tensor network simulation of IBM's Eagle kicked Ising experiment

ORAL

Abstract

I will present an accurate and efficient classical simulation of a kicked Ising quantum system on the heavy-hexagon lattice. A simulation of this system was recently performed on a 127 qubit quantum processor using noise mitigation techniques to enhance accuracy (Nature volume 618, p.500-505 (2023)). By adopting a tensor network approach that reflects the geometry of the lattice and is approximately contracted using belief propagation, we perform a classical simulation that is significantly more accurate and precise than the results obtained from the quantum processor and many other classical methods. We quantify the tree-like correlations of the wavefunction in order to explain the accuracy of our belief propagation-based approach. We also show how our method allows us to perform simulations of the system to long times in the thermodynamic limit, corresponding to a quantum computer with an infinite number of qubits. Our tensor network approach has broader applications for simulating the dynamics of quantum systems with tree-like correlations.

*I am grateful for ongoing support through the Flatiron Institute, a division of the Simons Foundation.

Publication: Efficient tensor network simulation of IBM's kicked Ising experiment, Joseph Tindall, Matt Fishman, Miles Stoudenmire, Dries Sels, arXiv preprint arXiv:2306.14887

Presenters

  • Joseph A Tindall

    • Simons Foundation

Authors

  • Joseph A Tindall

    • Simons Foundation
  • Miles Stoudenmire

    • Flatiron Institute
    • Flatiron Institute, Simons Foundation
  • Dries Sels

    • NYU
    • Department of Physics, New York University and Center for Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute
    • New York University (NYU)
  • Matthew Fishman

    • Simons Foundation
    • Flatiron Institute, Simons Foundation