Constant-Depth Quantum Imaginary Time Evolution Using Dynamic Fan-out Circuits
Abstract
Dynamic quantum circuits combine mid-circuit measurement with classical feed-forward, enabling circuit constructions with reduced entangling-gate depth. Here, we investigate their use in Quantum Imaginary Time Evolution (QITE), where circuit depth and parameter growth limit practical implementations of ground-state preparation. For dense classical optimization Hamiltonians, we introduce a reduced-parameter QITE ansatz that restricts entanglement generation via a small set of control qubits, enabling each QITE layer to be implemented with constant two-qubit gate depth using fan-out-based dynamic circuits. In noiseless simulations of exact cover and set partitioning instances, the reduced ansatz yields a higher success probability than standard QITE approaches. We implement unitary, dynamic fan-out, and semi-classical adaptive variants on IBM superconducting hardware. The semi-classical variant performs favorably to the unitary implementation, while the fully dynamic construction exposes the trade-offs between entangling-depth reduction and measurement and feed-forward overhead associated to dynamic circuit implementations. Using a fidelity threshold of 0.5 relative to the noiseless QITE ansatz, we show that dynamic fan-out based QITE would outperform unitary implementations on current devices when the measurement and two-qubit gate errors are reduced by 65% and the feedback latency is halved.
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