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Scaling advantage in quantum simulation of geometrically frustrated magnets

Authors :
King, Andrew D.
Raymond, Jack
Lanting, Trevor
Isakov, Sergei V.
Mohseni, Masoud
Poulin-Lamarre, Gabriel
Ejtemaee, Sara
Bernoudy, William
Ozfidan, Isil
Smirnov, Anatoly Yu.
Reis, Mauricio
Altomare, Fabio
Babcock, Michael
Baron, Catia
Berkley, Andrew J.
Boothby, Kelly
Bunyk, Paul I.
Christiani, Holly
Enderud, Colin
Evert, Bram
Harris, Richard
Hoskinson, Emile
Huang, Shuiyuan
Jooya, Kais
Khodabandelou, Ali
Ladizinsky, Nicolas
Li, Ryan
Lott, P. Aaron
MacDonald, Allison J. R.
Marsden, Danica
Marsden, Gaelen
Medina, Teresa
Molavi, Reza
Neufeld, Richard
Norouzpour, Mana
Oh, Travis
Pavlov, Igor
Perminov, Ilya
Prescott, Thomas
Rich, Chris
Sato, Yuki
Sheldan, Benjamin
Sterling, George
Swenson, Loren J.
Tsai, Nicholas
Volkmann, Mark H.
Whittaker, Jed D.
Wilkinson, Warren
Yao, Jason
Neven, Hartmut
Hilton, Jeremy P.
Ladizinsky, Eric
Johnson, Mark W.
Amin, Mohammad H.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The promise of quantum computing lies in harnessing programmable quantum devices for practical applications such as efficient simulation of quantum materials and condensed matter systems. One important task is the simulation of geometrically frustrated magnets in which topological phenomena can emerge from competition between quantum and thermal fluctuations. Here we report on experimental observations of relaxation in such simulations, measured on up to 1440 qubits with microsecond resolution. By initializing the system in a state with topological obstruction, we observe quantum annealing (QA) relaxation timescales in excess of one microsecond. Measurements indicate a dynamical advantage in the quantum simulation over the classical approach of path-integral Monte Carlo (PIMC) fixed-Hamiltonian relaxation with multiqubit cluster updates. The advantage increases with both system size and inverse temperature, exceeding a million-fold speedup over a CPU. This is an important piece of experimental evidence that in general, PIMC does not mimic QA dynamics for stoquastic Hamiltonians. The observed scaling advantage, for simulation of frustrated magnetism in quantum condensed matter, demonstrates that near-term quantum devices can be used to accelerate computational tasks of practical relevance.<br />Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 22 pages of supplemental material with 18 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1911.03446
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-20901-5