New Journal of Physics (Jan 2021)

Constructing quantum circuits with global gates

  • John van de Wetering

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/abf1b3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 4
p. 043015

Abstract

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There are various gate sets that can be used to describe a quantum computation. A particularly popular gate set in the literature on quantum computing consists of arbitrary single-qubit gates and two-qubit CNOT gates. A CNOT gate is however not always the natural multi-qubit interaction that can be implemented on a given physical quantum computer, necessitating a compilation step that transforms these CNOT gates to the native gate set. An especially interesting case where compilation is necessary is for ion trap quantum computers, where the natural entangling operation can act on more than two qubits and can even act globally on all qubits at once. This calls for an entirely different approach to constructing efficient circuits. In this paper we study the problem of converting a given circuit that uses two-qubit gates to one that uses global gates. Our three main contributions are as follows. First, we find an efficient algorithm for transforming an arbitrary circuit consisting of Clifford gates and arbitrary phase gates into a circuit consisting of single-qubit gates and a number of global interactions proportional to the number of non-Clifford phases present in the original circuit. Second, we find a general strategy to transform a global gate that targets all qubits into one that targets only a subset of the qubits. This approach scales linearly with the number of qubits that are not targeted, in contrast to the exponential scaling reported in (Maslov and Nam 2018 New J. Phys. 20 033018). Third, we improve on the number of global gates required to synthesise an arbitrary n -qubit Clifford circuit from the 12 n − 18 reported in (Maslov and Nam 2018 New J. Phys. 20 033018) to 6 n − 8.

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