Validating quantum-supremacy experiments with exact and fast tensor network contraction

12/09/2022
by   Yong Liu, et al.
0

The quantum circuits that declare quantum supremacy, such as Google Sycamore [Nature 574, 505 (2019)], raises a paradox in building reliable result references. While simulation on traditional computers seems the sole way to provide reliable verification, the required run time is doomed with an exponentially-increasing compute complexity. To find a way to validate current “quantum-supremacy" circuits with more than 50 qubits, we propose a simulation method that exploits the “classical advantage" (the inherent “store-and-compute" operation mode of von Neumann machines) of current supercomputers, and computes uncorrelated amplitudes of a random quantum circuit with an optimal reuse of the intermediate results and a minimal memory overhead throughout the process. Such a reuse strategy reduces the original linear scaling of the total compute cost against the number of amplitudes to a sublinear pattern, with greater reduction for more amplitudes. Based on a well-optimized implementation of this method on a new-generation Sunway supercomputer, we directly verify Sycamore by computing three million exact amplitudes for the experimentally generated bitstrings, obtaining an XEB fidelity of 0.191% which closely matches the estimated value of 0.224%. Our computation scales up to 41,932,800 cores with a sustained single-precision performance of 84.8 Pflops, which is accomplished within 8.5 days. Our method has a far-reaching impact in solving quantum many-body problems, statistical problems as well as combinatorial optimization problems where one often needs to contract many tensor networks which share a significant portion of tensors in common.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
10/27/2021

Closing the "Quantum Supremacy" Gap: Achieving Real-Time Simulation of a Random Quantum Circuit Using a New Sunway Supercomputer

We develop a high-performance tensor-based simulator for random quantum ...
research
03/15/2023

Quantum Circuit Simulation by SGEMM Emulation on Tensor Cores and Automatic Precision Selection

Quantum circuit simulation provides the foundation for the development o...
research
01/17/2022

RosneT: A Block Tensor Algebra Library for Out-of-Core Quantum Computing Simulation

With the advent of more powerful Quantum Computers, the need for larger ...
research
06/26/2020

Efficient 2D Tensor Network Simulation of Quantum Systems

Simulation of quantum systems is challenging due to the exponential size...
research
05/01/2022

Lifetime-based Method for Quantum Simulation on a New Sunway Supercomputer

Faster classical simulation becomes essential for the validation of quan...
research
12/29/2022

QPanda: high-performance quantum computing framework for multiple application scenarios

With the birth of Noisy Intermediate Scale Quantum (NISQ) devices and th...
research
04/18/2022

Optimizing Tensor Network Contraction Using Reinforcement Learning

Quantum Computing (QC) stands to revolutionize computing, but is current...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset