Thermally assisted quantum annealing of a 16-qubit problem / N. G. Dickson [et al.]

Уровень набора: Nature Communications = 2010-Альтернативный автор-лицо: Dickson, N. G.;Johnson, M. W.;Amin, M. H.;Harris, R.;Altomare, F.;Berkley, A. J.;Bunyk, P.;Cai, J.;Chapple, E. M.;Chavez, P.;Cioata, F.;Cirip, T.;Debuen, P.;Drew-Brook, M.;Enderud, C.;Gildert, S.;Hilton, J. P.;Hoskinson, E.;Karimi, K.;Ladizinsky, E.;Ladizinsky, N.;Lanting, T.;Mahon, T.;Neufeld, R.;Oh, T.;Perminov, I.;Petroff, C.;Przybysz, A.;Rich, C.;Spear, P.;Tcaciuc, A.;Thom, M. C.;Tolkacheva, E.;Uchaykin, S. V., specialist in the field of non-destructive testing, Engineer of Tomsk Polytechnic University, Doctor of physical and mathematical sciences, 1963-, Sergey Victorovich;Wang, J.;Wilson, A. B.;Rose, G.;Merali, Z.Коллективный автор (вторичный): Национальный исследовательский Томский политехнический университет (ТПУ), Институт неразрушающего контроля (ИНК), Кафедра точного приборостроения (ТПС)Язык: английский.Страна: .Резюме или реферат: Efforts to develop useful quantum computers have been blocked primarily by environmental noise. Quantum annealing is a scheme of quantum computation that is predicted to be more robust against noise, because despite the thermal environment mixing the system’s state in the energy basis, the system partially retains coherence in the computational basis, and hence is able to establish well-defined eigenstates. Here we examine the environment’s effect on quantum annealing using 16 qubits of a superconducting quantum processor. For a problem instance with an isolated small-gap anticrossing between the lowest two energy levels, we experimentally demonstrate that, even with annealing times eight orders of magnitude longer than the predicted single-qubit decoherence time, the probabilities of performing a successful computation are similar to those expected for a fully coherent system. Moreover, for the problem studied, we show that quantum annealing can take advantage of a thermal environment to achieve a speedup factor of up to 1,000 over a closed system.Аудитория: .Тематика: электронный ресурс | труды учёных ТПУ Ресурсы он-лайн:Щелкните здесь для доступа в онлайн | Щелкните здесь для доступа в онлайн
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Efforts to develop useful quantum computers have been blocked primarily by environmental noise. Quantum annealing is a scheme of quantum computation that is predicted to be more robust against noise, because despite the thermal environment mixing the system’s state in the energy basis, the system partially retains coherence in the computational basis, and hence is able to establish well-defined eigenstates. Here we examine the environment’s effect on quantum annealing using 16 qubits of a superconducting quantum processor. For a problem instance with an isolated small-gap anticrossing between the lowest two energy levels, we experimentally demonstrate that, even with annealing times eight orders of magnitude longer than the predicted single-qubit decoherence time, the probabilities of performing a successful computation are similar to those expected for a fully coherent system. Moreover, for the problem studied, we show that quantum annealing can take advantage of a thermal environment to achieve a speedup factor of up to 1,000 over a closed system

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