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“It’s better to have many more measurements to be on the safe side when it comes to circumventing errors, but then we wouldn’t be able to run this algorithm in a timely manner,” Claudino says. “That’s when we came up with measurement optimization to bring down the size of our calculations to something that was reasonable in terms of computing time. We went from something that was prohibitively large to something that was amenable to the quantum hardware.”
ORNL team members applied three independent strategies to decrease the problem’s computational workload, which reduced their time to solution from months to a few weeks. First, in a technique called qubit tapering, they decreased the number of qubits required to express the problem, reducing the size of the problem itself. Second, they took fewer measurements to solve the problem by measuring groups of terms once rather than measuring each individual term from every group. Third, instead of implementing each circuit individually, they found a way to run four circuits in parallel, allowing them to use all 20 qubits in the H1-1.
(Oak Ridge National Laboratory: Oak Ridge, TN) — Using the full capabilities of the Quantinuum H1-1 quantum computer, researchers from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory not only demonstrated best practices for scientific computing on current quantum systems but also produced an intriguing scientific result.
“The energetics of singlet fission revolve around double electronic excitations—two electrons move up to higher energy levels simultaneously, which is quite difficult to pin down with algorithms for conventional computers,” Claudino says. “But the underlying way that a quantum computer works, it can naturally treat the quantum correlations that give rise to this singlet-fission phenomenon. That’s when we came to the realization that, yes, we should use a quantum computer to treat something that is inherently quantum. That’s well known. But I think we were the first to realize that it had the application for this specific problem.”
Quantum computing—a technology still in its formative stages compared to classical supercomputers such as the OLCF’s exascale-class Frontier—utilizes quantum bits, or qubits, to perform calculations. Unlike binary bits used in classical computers, qubits go beyond 1s and 0s to also use 1 and 0 simultaneously in a mixed superposition, exponentially increasing processing power for certain equations, such as those based in quantum mechanics. However, quantum computer systems are still prone to high error rates, and the team had to compensate for this challenge to achieve reliable results.
“Even though the approaches we used have been previously published, I would say they are far from being widely adopted,” Claudino says. “I think we make a strong case for the use of such approaches. Researchers should be mindful that they may be wasting quantum resources and potentially increasing errors in their simulations by not taking advantage of these techniques.”
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The ORNL team’s project demonstrated the viability of current quantum computers to tackle scientific problems that could affect daily life. Although Claudino doesn’t foresee tackling singlet fission again soon, his team is considering other problems—such as “the interaction of matter and light”—that might be solved using the quantum computing techniques demonstrated in this project.
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