Posted

Dominic W. Berry, Kianna Wan, Andrew D. Baczewski, Elliot C. Eklund, Arkin Tikku, Ryan Babbush (Oct 10 2025).
Abstract: Here we describe an approach for simulating quantum chemistry on quantum computers with significantly lower asymptotic complexity than prior work. The approach uses a real-space first-quantised representation of the molecular Hamiltonian which we propagate using high-order product formulae. Essential for this low complexity is the use of a technique similar to the fast multipole method for computing the Coulomb operator with O~(η)\widetilde{\cal O}(\eta) complexity for a simulation with η\eta particles. We show how to modify this algorithm so that it can be implemented on a quantum computer. We ultimately demonstrate an approach with t(η4/3N1/3+η1/3N2/3)(ηNt/ϵ)o(1)t(\eta^{4/3}N^{1/3} + \eta^{1/3} N^{2/3} ) (\eta Nt/\epsilon)^{o(1)} gate complexity, where NN is the number of grid points, ϵ\epsilon is target precision, and tt is the duration of time evolution. This is roughly a speedup by O(η){\cal O}(\eta) over most prior algorithms. We provide lower complexity than all prior work for N<η6N<\eta^6 (the regime of practical interest), with only first-quantised interaction-picture simulations providing better performance for N>η6N>\eta^6. As with the classical fast multipole method, large numbers η103\eta\gtrsim 10^3 would be needed to realise this advantage.

Order by:

Want to join this discussion?

Join our community today and start discussing with our members by participating in exciting events, competitions, and challenges. Sign up now to engage with quantum experts!