Bloch-UPAW integrates Bloch orbitals and local UPAW corrections to enable lower-resource fault-tolerant quantum simulations of solids, showing roughly 10x Toffoli reduction for bulk diamond.
Quantum simulation of electronic structure via quantum fast multipole method
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abstract
Here we describe an approach for simulating electronic structure on quantum computers with significantly lower asymptotic complexity than prior work. The approach uses a real-space first-quantised representation of the molecular Hamiltonian which we propagate using high-order product formulae. Essential for this low complexity is the use of a technique similar to the fast multipole method for computing the Coulomb operator with $\widetilde{\cal O}(\eta)$ complexity for a simulation with $\eta$ particles. We show how to modify this algorithm so that it can be implemented on a quantum computer. We ultimately demonstrate an approach with $t(\eta^{4/3}N^{1/3} + \eta^{1/3} N^{2/3} ) (\eta Nt/\epsilon)^{o(1)}$ gate complexity, where $N$ is the number of grid points, $\epsilon$ is target precision, and $t$ is the duration of time evolution. This is roughly a speedup by ${\cal O}(\eta)$ over most prior algorithms. We provide lower complexity than all prior work for $N<\eta^7$ (the regime of practical interest), with only first-quantised interaction-picture simulations providing better performance for $N>\eta^7$. As with the classical fast multipole method, large particle numbers $\eta\gtrsim 10^3$ would be needed to realise this advantage.
fields
quant-ph 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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Fault-tolerant simulation of the electronic structure using Projector Augmented-Waves and Bloch orbitals
Bloch-UPAW integrates Bloch orbitals and local UPAW corrections to enable lower-resource fault-tolerant quantum simulations of solids, showing roughly 10x Toffoli reduction for bulk diamond.