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Improving the Performance of Deep Quantum Optimization Algorithms with Continuous Gate Sets

Nathan Lacroix, Christoph Hellings, Christian Kraglund Andersen, Agustín Di Paolo, Ants Remm, Stefania Lazar, Sebastian Krinner, Graham J. Norris, Mihai Gabureac, Johannes Heinsoo, Alexandre Blais, Christopher Eichler, Andreas Wallraff

2020Repository for Publications and Research Data (ETH Zurich)67 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Variational quantum algorithms are believed to be promising for solving computationally hard problems on noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) systems. Gaining computational power from these algorithms critically relies on the mitigation of errors during their execution, which for coherence-limited operations is achievable by reducing the gate count. Here, we demonstrate an improvement of up to a factor of 3 in algorithmic performance for the quantum approximate optimization algorithm (QAOA) as measured by the success probability, by implementing a continuous hardware-efficient gate set using superconducting quantum circuits. This gate set allows us to perform the phase separation step in QAOA with a single physical gate for each pair of qubits instead of decomposing it into two CZ gates and single-qubit gates. With this reduced number of physical gates, which scales with the number of layers employed in the algorithm, we experimentally investigate the circuit-depth-dependent performance of QAOA applied to exact-cover problem instances mapped onto three and seven qubits, using up to a total of 399 operations and up to nine layers. Our results demonstrate that the use of continuous gate sets may be a key component in extending the impact of near-term quantum computers.

Topics & Concepts

QubitQuantum computerComputer scienceQuantum gateAlgorithmQuantum circuitControlled NOT gateGate countQuantum algorithmSet (abstract data type)QuantumQuantum error correctionQuantum mechanicsPhysicsEmbedded systemProgramming languageQuantum Computing Algorithms and ArchitectureQuantum Information and CryptographyQuantum-Dot Cellular Automata
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