Discretizing quantum field theories for quantum simulation
Terry Farrelly, Julien Streich

TL;DR
This paper explores discretization strategies for quantum field theories in quantum simulations, demonstrating that a timestep equal to the lattice spacing suffices for accurate physics, and introduces circuits with novel properties and interpretations.
Contribution
It introduces new quantum circuits for lattice QFT that are equivalent to path integrals and show that larger timesteps are sufficient, expanding the scope of quantum simulation methods.
Findings
A timestep equal to the lattice spacing is sufficient for accurate simulation.
Quantum circuits equivalent to path integrals are constructed for $$ theory.
Discrete-time lattice QFT circuits form quantum cellular automata.
Abstract
To date, all proposed quantum algorithms for simulating quantum field theory (QFT) simulate (continuous-time) Hamiltonian lattice QFT as a stepping stone. Two overlooked issues are how large we can take the timestep in these simulations while getting the right physics and whether we can go beyond the standard recipe that relies on Hamiltonian lattice QFT. The first issue is crucial in practice for, e.g., trapped-ion experiments which actually have a lower bound on the possible ratio of timestep to lattice spacing. To this end, we show that a timestep equal to or going to zero faster than the spatial lattice spacing is necessary for quantum simulations of QFT, but far more importantly a timestep equal to the lattice spacing is actually sufficient. To do this, first for theory, we give a quantum circuit exactly equivalent to the real-time path integral from the discrete-time…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Automata and Applications · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
