High ground state overlap via quantum embedding methods
Mihael Erakovic, Freek Witteveen, Dylan Harley, Jakob G\"unther,, Moritz Bensberg, Oinam Romesh Meitei, Minsik Cho, Troy Van Voorhis, Markus, Reiher, Matthias Christandl

TL;DR
This paper explores how quantum embedding methods can improve the preparation of guiding states with high ground state overlap, facilitating quantum phase estimation for large molecules and biomolecules.
Contribution
It extends quantum impurity problem analysis to guide state preparation, demonstrating that mean-field states can achieve sufficient overlap for quantum phase estimation in embedded systems.
Findings
Mean-field states have high enough overlap for phase estimation
Different embedding strategies affect orbital entanglement
Quantum embedding enables scalable guiding state preparation
Abstract
Quantum computers can accurately compute ground state energies using phase estimation, but this requires a guiding state that has significant overlap with the true ground state. For large molecules and extended materials, it becomes difficult to find guiding states with good ground state overlap for growing molecule sizes. Additionally, the required number of qubits and quantum gates may become prohibitively large. One approach for dealing with these challenges is to use a quantum embedding method, which allows a reduction to one or multiple smaller quantum cores embedded in a larger quantum region. In such situations it is unclear how the embedding method affects the hardness of constructing good guiding states. In this work, we therefore investigate the preparation of guiding states in the context of quantum embedding methods. We extend previous work on quantum impurity problems, a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
