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Scaling advantage over path-integral Monte Carlo in quantum simulation of geometrically frustrated magnets

Authors :
Kais Jooya
Hartmut Neven
Ryan Li
Ali Khodabandelou
R. Neufeld
Richard Harris
William Bernoudy
C. Rich
Jason Yao
Igor Pavlov
Andrew J. Berkley
Allison MacDonald
C. Enderud
Jed D. Whittaker
George Sterling
Jack Raymond
Fabio Altomare
Reza Molavi
Ilya Perminov
C. Baron
Gabriel Poulin-Lamarre
Bram Evert
Mark W. Johnson
Benjamin Sheldan
Jeremy P. Hilton
Sergei V. Isakov
Masoud Mohseni
T. Medina
E. Ladizinsky
P. Aaron Lott
Isil Ozfidan
Michael Babcock
Thomas Prescott
Holly Christiani
Danica Marsden
N. Ladizinsky
Mark H. Volkmann
Paul I. Bunyk
Emile Hoskinson
Gaelen Marsden
T. Oh
Anatoly Yu. Smirnov
Shuiyuan Huang
Trevor Lanting
Yuki Sato
Sara Ejtemaee
Kelly T. R. Boothby
Loren J. Swenson
Warren Wilkinson
Mauricio Reis
Andrew D. King
Mana Norouzpour
Mohammad H. Amin
Nicholas Tsai
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-6 (2021), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2021.

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 equilibration 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) equilibration timescales in excess of one microsecond. Measurements indicate a dynamical advantage in the quantum simulation compared with spatially local update dynamics of path-integral Monte Carlo (PIMC). The advantage increases with both system size and inverse temperature, exceeding a million-fold speedup over an efficient CPU implementation. PIMC is a leading classical method for such simulations, and a scaling advantage of this type was recently shown to be impossible in certain restricted settings. This is therefore an important piece of experimental evidence that PIMC does not simulate QA dynamics even for sign-problem-free Hamiltonians, and that near-term quantum devices can be used to accelerate computational tasks of practical relevance.<br />Experimental demonstration of quantum speedup that scales with the system size is the goal of near-term quantum computing. Here, the authors demonstrate such scaling advantage for a D-Wave quantum annealer over analogous classical algorithms in simulations of frustrated quantum magnets.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97dd51c6b47495c500708e43b24be4b2