Orbital transformations to reduce the 1-norm of the electronic structure Hamiltonian for quantum computing applications
Emiel Koridon, Saad Yalouz, Bruno Senjean, Francesco Buda, Thomas E., O'Brien, Lucas Visscher

TL;DR
This paper explores how classical orbital transformations can reduce the 1-norm of the electronic structure Hamiltonian, thereby decreasing quantum algorithm complexity for quantum chemistry simulations on NISQ devices.
Contribution
It introduces a new formula for the 1-norm based on electronic integrals and demonstrates an orbital-optimization scheme to minimize it, improving quantum algorithm efficiency.
Findings
Localization schemes impact the 1-norm significantly
Orbital optimization can reduce the 1-norm more effectively
The new formula aids in selecting optimal orbital transformations
Abstract
Reducing the complexity of quantum algorithms to treat quantum chemistry problems is essential to demonstrate an eventual quantum advantage of Noisy-Intermediate Scale Quantum (NISQ) devices over their classical counterpart. Significant improvements have been made recently to simulate the time-evolution operator where is the electronic structure Hamiltonian, or to simulate directly (when written as a linear combination of unitaries) by using block encoding or "qubitization" techniques. A fundamental measure quantifying the practical implementation complexity of these quantum algorithms is the so-called "1-norm" of the qubit-representation of the Hamiltonian, which can be reduced by writing the Hamiltonian in factorized or tensor-hypercontracted forms for instance. In this work, we investigate the effect of…
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