Exact quantum decision diagrams with scaling guarantees for Clifford+$T$ circuits and beyond
Arend-Jan Quist, Tim Coopmans, Alfons Laarman

TL;DR
This paper introduces an exact decision diagram method for Clifford+$T$ quantum circuits, providing theoretical scaling guarantees and demonstrating improved accuracy and efficiency over floating-point approaches.
Contribution
It presents the first scaling guarantees for exact quantum decision diagrams with Clifford+$T$ gates, using algebraic representations to ensure bounded size and runtime.
Findings
Decision diagram size is linearly bounded by T-gates and qubits.
Runtime and node count are upper bounded by 2^t * poly(g, n).
The method outperforms floating-point approaches in accuracy and efficiency.
Abstract
A decision diagram (DD) is a graph-like data structure for homomorphic compression of Boolean and pseudo-Boolean functions. Over the past decades, decision diagrams have been successfully applied to verification, linear algebra, stochastic reasoning, and quantum circuit analysis. Floating-point errors have, however, significantly slowed down practical implementations of real- and complex-valued decision diagrams. In the context of quantum computing, attempts to mitigate this numerical instability have thus far lacked theoretical scaling guarantees and have had only limited success in practice. Here, we focus on the analysis of quantum circuits consisting of Clifford gates and gates (a common universal gate set). We first hand-craft an algebraic representation for complex numbers, which replace the floating point coefficients in a decision diagram. Then, we prove that the sizes of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Formal Methods in Verification · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
