Quantum Computing Framework for Transient Scattering of Electromagnetic Waves by Dielectric Structures
Min Soe, Abhay K. Ram, Efstratios Koukoutsis, George Vahala, Linda Vahala, and Kyriakos Hizanidis

TL;DR
This paper introduces a quantum lattice algorithm for simulating transient electromagnetic scattering by dielectric structures, revealing new insights into wave behavior not observable in frequency domain studies.
Contribution
It develops a quantum computing framework that models transient electromagnetic scattering, providing novel insights through time-dependent simulations.
Findings
Simulations show multiple reflections within dielectric structures for wave packets.
Transient scattering differs significantly from steady-state Mie scattering.
A simple Kirchhoff model explains the contrast in scattering behaviors.
Abstract
Quantum computers are ideally set up to solve linear systems which are of a form similar to the Schrodinger/Dirac equation of quantum mechanics. In the framework of linear response theory, the propagation and scattering of electromagnetic waves in a dielectric medium are described by Maxwell equations. The qubit lattice algorithm consists of a series of alternating unitary streaming and entanglement operators acting on qubit amplitudes constructed from the electric and magnetic fields. It is not a direct discretization of Maxwell equations, but recovers the desired equations to second order in lattice grid spacing. The resulting algorithm is implemented on a present-day supercomputer and is the basis of studying scattering of electromagnetic waves by an elliptical dielectric. As opposed to the steady state description of Mie scattering in frequency domain, the temporal evolution…
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