open access publication

Conference Paper, 2024

Forward and Backward Constrained Bisimulations for Quantum Circuits

Lecture Notes in Computer Science Including Subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics, ISSN 0302-9743, ISBN 9783031572487, Volume 14571, Pages 343-362, 10.1007/978-3-031-57249-4_17

Contributors

Jimenez-Pastor A. 0000-0002-6096-0623 (Corresponding author) [1] Larsen K.G. 0000-0002-5953-3384 [1] Tribastone M. 0000-0002-6018-5989 [2] Tschaikowski M. 0000-0002-6186-8669 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Aalborg University
  2. [NORA names: AAU Aalborg University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca
  4. [NORA names: Italy; Europe, EU; OECD]

Abstract

Efficient methods for the simulation of quantum circuits on classic computers are crucial for their analysis due to the exponential growth of the problem size with the number of qubits. Here we study lumping methods based on bisimulation, an established class of techniques that has been proven successful for (classic) stochastic and deterministic systems such as Markov chains and ordinary differential equations. Forward constrained bisimulation yields a lower-dimensional model which exactly preserves quantum measurements projected on a linear subspace of interest. Backward constrained bisimulation gives a reduction that is valid on a subspace containing the circuit input, from which the circuit result can be fully recovered. We provide an algorithm to compute the constraint bisimulations yielding coarsest reductions in both cases, using a duality result relating the two notions. As applications, we provide theoretical bounds on the size of the reduced state space for well-known quantum algorithms for search, optimization, and factorization. Using a prototype implementation, we report significant reductions on a set of benchmarks. Furthermore, we show that constraint bisimulation complements state-of-the-art methods for the simulation of quantum circuits based on decision diagrams.

Keywords

bisimulation, lumpability, quantum circuits

Funders

  • European Union-NextGenerationEU

Data Provider: Elsevier