Posted

Hemant Sharma, Kenneth Goodenough, Johannes Borregaard, Filip Rozpędek, Jonas Helsen (Jun 03 2025).
Abstract: Graph states are a powerful class of entangled states with numerous applications in quantum communication and quantum computation. Local Clifford (LC) operations that map one graph state to another can alter the structure of the corresponding graphs, including changing the number of edges. Here, we tackle the associated edge-minimization problem: finding graphs with the minimum number of edges in the LC-equivalence class of a given graph. Such graphs are called minimum edge representatives (MER), and are crucial for minimizing the resources required to create a graph state. We leverage Bouchet's algebraic formulation of LC-equivalence to encode the edge-minimization problem as an integer linear program (ILP). We further propose a simulated annealing (SA) approach guided by the local clustering coefficient for edge minimization. We identify new MERs for graph states with up to 16 qubits by combining SA and ILP. We extend the ILP to weighted-edge minimization, where each edge has an associated weight, and prove that this problem is NP-complete. Finally, we employ our tools to minimize resources required to create all-photonic generalized repeater graph states using fusion operations.

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