Quantum Power Method by a Superposition of Time-Evolved States
Abstract
We propose a quantum-classical hybrid algorithm of the power method, here dubbed as quantum power method, to evaluate Hn | with quantum computers, where n is a nonnegative integer, H is a time-independent Hamiltonian of interest, and | is a quantum state. We show that the number of gates required for approximating Hn scales linearly in the power and the number of qubits, making it a promising application for near term quantum computers. Using numerical simulation, we show that the power method can control systematic errors in approximating the Hamiltonian power Hn for n as large as 100. As an application, we combine our method with a multireference Krylov-subspace-diagonalization scheme to show how one can improve the estimation of ground-state energies and the ground-state fidelities found using a variational-quantum-eigensolver scheme. Finally, we outline other applications of the quantum power method, including several moment-based methods. We numerically demonstrate the connected-moment expansion for the imaginary-time evolution and compare the results with the multireference Krylov-subspace diagonalization.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.