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Characterizing quantum supremacy in near-term devices

Authors :
Boixo, S
Isakov, SV
Smelyanskiy, VN
Babbush, R
Ding, N
Jiang, Z
Bremner, MJ
Martinis, JM
Neven, H
Boixo, S
Isakov, SV
Smelyanskiy, VN
Babbush, R
Ding, N
Jiang, Z
Bremner, MJ
Martinis, JM
Neven, H
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

© 2018 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature. All rights reserved. A critical question for quantum computing in the near future is whether quantum devices without error correction can perform a well-defined computational task beyond the capabilities of supercomputers. Such a demonstration of what is referred to as quantum supremacy requires a reliable evaluation of the resources required to solve tasks with classical approaches. Here, we propose the task of sampling from the output distribution of random quantum circuits as a demonstration of quantum supremacy. We extend previous results in computational complexity to argue that this sampling task must take exponential time in a classical computer. We introduce cross-entropy benchmarking to obtain the experimental fidelity of complex multiqubit dynamics. This can be estimated and extrapolated to give a success metric for a quantum supremacy demonstration. We study the computational cost of relevant classical algorithms and conclude that quantum supremacy can be achieved with circuits in a two-dimensional lattice of 7 × 7 qubits and around 40 clock cycles. This requires an error rate of around 0.5% for two-qubit gates (0.05% for one-qubit gates), and it would demonstrate the basic building blocks for a fault-tolerant quantum computer.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1197444412
Document Type :
Electronic Resource