Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2024; Minneapolis & Virtual
Session N49: Quantum Algorithms for Electronic Structure Problems
11:30 AM–2:30 PM,
Wednesday, March 6, 2024
Room: 200G
Sponsoring
Unit:
DQI
Chair: Norm Tubman, NASA Ames
Abstract: N49.00003 : Excited-CAFQA: A classical simulation bootstrap for the variational estimation of molecular excited states.
12:18 PM–12:30 PM
Presenter:
Bikrant Bhattacharyya
(Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy)
Authors:
Bikrant Bhattacharyya
(Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy)
Gokul Subramanian Ravi
(University of Michigan)
Variational Quantum Algorithms (VQAs) are iterative algorithms suited to implementation on current-era quantum devices. VQAs employ classical optimization to minimize cost functions evaluated on quantum circuits. However, the extent to which VQAs manage noise is often insufficient for quantum chemistry applications. One method of improving VQAs is through accurate ansatz initialization. The CAFQA (Clifford Ansatz For Quantum Accuracy) protocol runs a discrete search through a classically simulatable subset of the entire state space to find a desirable initialization. Prior work has evaluated CAFQA applied to the Variational Quantum Eigensolver (VQE), a VQA that computes grounds states of a Hamiltonian. Motivated by CAFQA's success, we propose Excited-CAFQA initialization for Variational Quantum Deflation (VQD), a quantum algorithm that extends VQE by allowing the computation of excited states. VQD recursively computes excited states, by constraining the kth state to be orthogonal to the previous k−1 computed energy states via a penalty term appended to the standard VQE cost function. Just as with VQE, the VQD cost function can be efficiently computed classically for the states considered in the discrete CAFQA search, allowing for the discrete CAFQA optimizer to find good initial parameters for each energy level computation. Preliminary evaluation shows that Excited-CAFQA achieves 90 to 99+% accuracy across a variety of bond lengths and excited states for H2 and HeH+ molecular systems.
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