A hybrid algorithm framework for small quantum computers with application to finding Hamiltonian cycles

07/02/2019
by   Yimin Ge, et al.
0

Recent works have shown that quantum computers can polynomially speed up certain SAT-solving algorithms even when the number of available qubits is significantly smaller than the number of variables. Here we generalise this approach. We present a framework for hybrid quantum-classical algorithms which utilise quantum computers significantly smaller than the problem size. Given an arbitrarily small ratio of the quantum computer to the instance size, we achieve polynomial speedups for classical divide-and-conquer algorithms, provided that certain criteria on the time- and space-efficiency are met. We demonstrate how this approach can be used to enhance Eppstein's algorithm for the cubic Hamiltonian cycle problem, and achieve a polynomial speedup for any ratio of the number of qubits to the size of the graph.

READ FULL TEXT

page 11

page 15

research
07/14/2020

Hybrid divide-and-conquer approach for tree search algorithms

As we are entering the era of real-world small quantum computers, findin...
research
07/24/2018

Computational speedups using small quantum devices

Suppose we have a small quantum computer with only M qubits. Can such a ...
research
04/28/2022

Algorithmic QUBO Formulations for k-SAT and Hamiltonian Cycles

Quadratic unconstrained binary optimization (QUBO) can be seen as a gene...
research
03/12/2018

A Hybrid Quantum-Classical Paradigm to Mitigate Embedding Costs in Quantum Annealing

Despite rapid recent progress towards the development of quantum compute...
research
05/27/2011

Solving Highly Constrained Search Problems with Quantum Computers

A previously developed quantum search algorithm for solving 1-SAT proble...
research
06/04/2018

Towards the Practical Application of Near-Term Quantum Computers in Quantum Chemistry Simulations: A Problem Decomposition Approach

With the aim of establishing a framework to efficiently perform the prac...
research
09/22/2022

Iterative Qubits Management for Quantum Index Searching in a Hybrid System

Recent advances in quantum computing systems attract tremendous attentio...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset