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What and Who

Observing ground-state properties of the Fermi-Hubbard model using a scalable algorithm on a quantum computer

Ashley Montanaro
Phasecraft and University of Bristol
MPI Colloquium Series Distinguished Speaker
AG 1, INET, AG 5, RG1, SWS, AG 2, AG 4, D6, AG 3  
AG Audience
English

Date, Time and Location

Thursday, 18 November 2021
14:00
60 Minutes
Virtual talk
Virtual talk
Saarbrücken

Abstract

The famous, yet unsolved, Fermi-Hubbard model for strongly-correlated electronic systems is a prominent target for quantum computers. However, accurately representing the Fermi-Hubbard ground state for large instances may be beyond the reach of near-term quantum hardware. In this talk I will discuss recent results showing experimentally that an efficient, low-depth variational quantum algorithm with few parameters can reproduce important qualitative features of medium-size instances of the Fermi-Hubbard model. We address 1x8 and 2x4 instances on 16 qubits on a superconducting quantum processor, substantially larger than previous work based on less scalable compression techniques, and going beyond the family of 1D Fermi-Hubbard instances, which are solvable classically. Consistent with predictions for the ground state, we observe the onset of the metal-insulator transition and Friedel oscillations in 1D, and antiferromagnetic order in both 1D and 2D. We use a variety of error-mitigation techniques, including symmetries of the Fermi-Hubbard model and a technique tailored to simulating fermionic systems. We also introduce a new variational optimisation algorithm based on iterative Bayesian updates of a local surrogate model. Our scalable approach is a first step to using near-term quantum computers to determine low-energy properties of strongly-correlated electronic systems that cannot be solved exactly by classical computers.

Contact

Kurt Mehlhorn
+49 681 9325 1000
--email hidden

Virtual Meeting Details

Zoom
945 7732 1297
205903
public

Kurt Mehlhorn, 11/16/2021 08:26 -- Created document.