Quantum homeopathy works: Efficient unitary designs with a system-size independent number of non-Clifford gates

PIRSA ID: 20050048
Event Type: Seminar
Scientific Area(s):
Other
End date:
Speaker(s):
  • Ingo Roth, Freie Universität Berlin

Many quantum information protocols require the implementation of random unitaries. Because it takes exponential resources to produce Haar-random unitaries drawn from the full n-qubit group, one often resorts to t-designs. Unitary t-designs mimic the Haar-measure up to t-th moments. It is known that Clifford operations can implement at most 3-designs. In this work, we quantify the non-Clifford resources required to break this barrier. We find that it suffices to inject O(t^4 log^2(t) log(1/ε)) many non-Clifford gates into a polynomial-depth random Clifford circuit to obtain an ε-approximate t-design. Strikingly, the number of non-Clifford gates required is independent of the system size – asymptotically, the density of non-Clifford gates is allowed to tend to zero. We also derive novel bounds on the convergence time of random Clifford circuits to the t-th moment of the uniform distribution on the Clifford group. Our proofs exploit a recently developed variant of Schur-Weyl duality for the Clifford group, as well as bounds on restricted spectral gaps of averaging operators. Joint work with J. Haferkamp, F. Montealegre-Mora, M. Heinrich, J. Eisert, and D. Gross.