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There is a tremendous interest in fabricating superconducting flux circuits that are nonstoquastic---i.e., have positive off-diagonal matrix elements---in their qubit representation, as these circuits are thought to be unsimulable by classical approaches and thus could play a key role in the demonstration of speedups in quantum annealing protocols. We show however that the efficient simulation of these systems is possible by the direct simulation of the flux circuits. Our approach not only obviates the reduction to a qubit representation but also produces results that are more in the spirit of the experimental setup. We discuss the implications of our work. Specifically we argue that our results cast doubt on the conception that superconducting flux circuits represent the correct avenue for universal adiabatic quantum computers.
Stoquastic Hamiltonians are characterized by the property that their off-diagonal matrix elements in the standard product basis are real and non-positive. Many interesting quantum models fall into this class including the Transverse field Ising Model
Magnetic flux tunability is an essential feature in most approaches to quantum computing based on superconducting qubits. Independent control of the fluxes in multiple loops is hampered by crosstalk. Calibrating flux crosstalk becomes a challenging t
The ground state of a pair of ultrastrongly coupled bosonic modes is predicted to be a two-mode squeezed vacuum. However, the corresponding quantum correlations are currently unobservable in condensed matter where such a coupling can be reached, sinc
The role of non-stoquasticity in the field of quantum annealing and adiabatic quantum computing is an actively debated topic. We study a strongly-frustrated quasi-one-dimensional quantum Ising model on a two-leg ladder to elucidate how a first-order
Quantum simulators are attractive as a means to study many-body quantum systems that are not amenable to classical numerical treatment. A versatile framework for quantum simulation is offered by superconducting circuits. In this perspective, we discu