Shorter quantum circuits via single-qubit gate approximation

Vadym Kliuchnikov, Kristin Lauter, Romy Minko, Adam Paetznick, Christophe Petit

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Abstract

We give a novel procedure for approximating general single-qubit unitaries from a finite universal gate set by reducing the problem to a novel magnitude approximation problem, achieving an immediate improvement in sequence length by a factor of 7/9. Extending the work of [Has17; Cam17], we show that taking probabilistic mixtures of channels to solve fallback [BRS15b] and magnitude approximation problems saves factor of two in approximation costs. In particular, over the Clifford+ T gate set we achieve an average non-Clifford gate count of 0.23 log2(1/ε) + 2.13 and T-count 0.56 log2(1/ε) + 5.3 with mixed fallback approximations for diamond norm accuracy ε.

This paper provides a holistic overview of gate approximation, in addition to these new insights. We give an end-to-end procedure for gate approximation for general gate sets related to some quaternion algebras, providing pedagogical examples using common fault-tolerant gate sets (V, Clifford+T and Clifford+ T). We also provide detailed numerical results for Clifford+T and Clifford+ T gate sets. In an effort to keep the paper self-contained, we include an overview of the relevant algorithms for integer point enumeration and relative norm equation solving. We provide a number of further applications of the magnitude approximation problems, as well as improved algorithms for exact synthesis, in the Appendices.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1208
Number of pages87
JournalQuantum
Volume7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Dec 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Romy Minko: This work was supported by the CDT in Cyber Security at the University of Oxford (EP/P00881X/1) and the Additional Funding Programme for Mathematical Sciences, delivered by EPSRC (EP/V521917/1) and the Heilbronn Institute for Mathematical Research.

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright 2023 Blincow et al.

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
  • Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)

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