ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We discuss encodings of fermionic many-body systems by qubits in the presence of symmetries. Such encodings eliminate redundant degrees of freedom in a way that preserves a simple structure of the system Hamiltonian enabling quantum simulations with fewer qubits. First we consider $U(1)$ symmetry describing the particle number conservation. Using a previously known encoding based on the first quantization method a system of $M$ fermi modes with $N$ particles can be simulated on a quantum computer with $Q=Nlog{(M)}$ qubits. We propose a new version of this encoding tailored to variational quantum algorithms. Also we show how to improve sparsity of the simulator Hamiltonian using orthogonal arrays. Next we consider encodings based on the second quantization method. It is shown that encodings with a given filling fraction $ u=N/M$ and a qubit-per-mode ratio $eta=Q/M<1$ can be constructed from efficiently decodable classical LDPC codes with the relative distance $2 u$ and the encoding rate $1-eta$. A family of codes based on high-girth bipartite graphs is discussed. Graph-based encodings eliminate roughly $M/N$ qubits. Finally we consider discrete symmetries, and show how to eliminate qubits using previously known encodings, illustrating the technique for simple molecular-type Hamiltonians.
We propose a non-linear, hybrid quantum-classical scheme for simulating non-equilibrium dynamics of strongly correlated fermions described by the Hubbard model in a Bethe lattice in the thermodynamic limit. Our scheme implements non-equilibrium dynam
Many-body fermionic quantum calculations performed on analog quantum computers are restricted by the presence of k-local terms, which represent interactions among more than two qubits. These originate from the fermion-to-qubit mapping applied to the
We consider a macroscopic quantum system such as a qubit, interacting with a bath of fermions as in the Frohlich polaron model. The interaction Hamiltonian is thus linear in the macroscopic system variable, and bilinear in the fermions. Using the rec
Although a universal quantum computer is still far from reach, the tremendous advances in controllable quantum devices, in particular with solid-state systems, make it possible to physically implement quantum simulators. Quantum simulators are physic
We present a canonical derivation of an influence superoperator which generates the reduced dynamics of a Fermionic quantum system linearly coupled to a Fermionic environment initially at thermal equilibrium. We use this formalism to derive a general