PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Unlocking quantum computing power: automated protocol design for quantum advantage

Unlocking quantum computing power: automated protocol design for quantum advantage
2024-03-25
(Press-News.org)

Imagine a world where complex calculations that currently take months for our best supercomputers to crack could be performed in a matter of minutes. Quantum computing is revolutionizing our digital world. In a research article published Feb. 19 in Intelligent Computing, researchers unveiled an automated protocol-design approach that could unlock the computational power of quantum devices sooner than we imagined.

Quantum computational advantage represents a critical milestone in the development of quantum technologies. It signifies the ability of quantum computers to outperform classical supercomputers in certain tasks. Achieving quantum computational advantage requires specially designed protocols. Random circuit sampling, for example, has demonstrated promising results in recent experiments. An issue which must be considered in attempts to use random circuit sampling is that the structure of a random quantum circuit must be carefully designed to enlarge the gap between quantum computing and classical simulation. To address the challenge, researchers He-Liang Huang, Youwei Zhao and Chu Guo developed an automated protocol-design approach for determining the optimal random quantum circuit in quantum computational advantage experiments.

The quantum processor architecture used for random circuit sampling experiments uses 2-qubit gate patterns. The 2-qubit gate realizes the interaction between the two qubits by acting on the states of the two qubits, thereby constructing a quantum circuit and realizing quantum computing. To ensure that the superior performance of quantum computing is fully exploited when performing calculations, it is necessary to maximize the classical simulation cost. However, determining the optimal random quantum circuit design to maximize classical simulation cost is not straightforward.

Finding the optimal random quantum circuit first requires exhausting all possible patterns, then estimating the classical simulation cost for each of them and selecting the one with the highest cost. The classical simulation cost is highly dependent on the algorithm used, but the traditional algorithm currently has the limitation that the estimation time is too long.

The new method proposed by the authors uses the Schrödinger-Feynman algorithm. This algorithm divides the system into two subsystems and represents their quantum states as state vectors. The cost of the algorithm is determined by the entanglement generated between the two subsystems. Evaluating complexity using this algorithm requires much less time, and the advantages become more apparent as the random quantum circuit size increases.

The authors experimentally proved the effectiveness of the random quantum circuit obtained by the proposed method compared with other algorithms. In the Zuchongzhi 2.0 quantum processor, five random quantum circuits were generated, each with a different Schrödinger-Feynman algorithm complexity. Experimental results show that circuits with higher complexity also have higher costs.

The rivalry between classical and quantum computing is expected to conclude within a decade. This new approach maximizes the computational power of quantum computing without imposing new requirements on the quantum hardware. In addition, the main reason this new approach can obtain random quantum circuits with higher classical simulation costs may be the faster growth of quantum entanglement. In the future, understanding this phenomenon and its underlying physics may help researchers explore practical applications using quantum advantage experiments.

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Unlocking quantum computing power: automated protocol design for quantum advantage Unlocking quantum computing power: automated protocol design for quantum advantage 2 Unlocking quantum computing power: automated protocol design for quantum advantage 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Pitt receives NIH grants to study health effects of chemical exposures following the East Palestine train derailment

2024-03-25
PITTSBURGH – The University of Pittsburgh has received a pair of two-year grants from the National Institutes of Health to support studies on the health effects of environmental contamination resulting from the train derailment that spilled hazardous materials into the local communities in East Palestine, Ohio, in February 2023. The grants, totaling nearly $1 million, were awarded through a National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences ...

Researchers Discover Evolutionary “Tipping Point” in Fungi

Researchers Discover Evolutionary “Tipping Point” in Fungi
2024-03-25
Scientists have found a “tipping point” in the evolution of fungi that throttles their growth and sculpts their shapes. The findings, published in the journal Cell Reports, demonstrate how small changes in environmental factors can lead to huge changes in evolutionary outcomes. Fungi are nature’s great composters. They wait within the forest floor to feed on fallen trees and autumn leaves, releasing essential nutrients from these plants back into the Earth.   Although fungi often ...

Differences in donor heart acceptance by race and gender of patients on the transplant waiting list

2024-03-25
About The Study: The cumulative incidence of heart offer acceptance by a transplant center team was consistently lower for Black candidates than for white candidates of the same gender and higher for women than for men in this study. These disparities persisted after adjusting for candidate-, donor-, and offer-level variables, possibly suggesting racial and gender bias in the decision-making process. Further investigation of site-level decision-making may reveal strategies for equitable donor heart acceptance.  Authors: Khadijah Breathett, M.D., M.S., of Indiana University in Indianapolis, ...

Job flexibility, job security, and mental health among working adults

2024-03-25
About The Study: In this study of 18,000 adults who were employed, greater job flexibility was significantly associated with reduced odds of experiencing serious psychological distress and experiencing anxiety. Greater job security was significantly associated with reduced odds of experiencing serious psychological distress and experiencing anxiety.  Authors: Monica L. Wang, Sc.D., M.S., of the Boston University School of Public Health, is the corresponding author.  To access ...

Inappropriate diagnosis of pneumonia among hospitalized adults

2024-03-25
About The Study: Inappropriate diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia was common, particularly among older adults, those with dementia, and those presenting with altered mental status in this study of 17,000 hospitalized adults treated for pneumonia in 48 Michigan hospitals. Full-course antibiotic treatment of those inappropriately diagnosed with community-acquired pneumonia may be harmful.  Authors: Ashwin B. Gupta, M.D., of the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System in Ann Arbor, Michigan, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website ...

Development of a follow-up measure to ensure complete screening for colorectal cancer

2024-03-25
About The Study: The findings of this observational study of 20,000 adults suggest that a measure of follow-up colonoscopy within defined periods after an abnormal result of a stool-based screening test for colorectal cancer is warranted based on low current performance rates and would be feasible to collect by health systems and produce valid, reliable results.  Authors: Elizabeth L. Ciemins, Ph.D., M.P.H., M.A., of the American Medical Group Association in Alexandria, Virginia, is the corresponding author.  To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media ...

Breakthrough in modeling

Breakthrough in modeling
2024-03-25
Coastal seas form a complex transition zone between the two largest CO2 sinks in the global carbon cycle: land and ocean. Ocean researchers have now succeeded for the first time in investigating the role of the coastal ocean in a seamless model representation. The team led by Dr. Moritz Mathis from the Cluster of Excellence for Climate Research CLICCS at Universität Hamburg and the Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon was able to show: The intensity of CO2 uptake is higher in coastal seas than in the open ocean. This is evidenced by a study published in the journal Nature Climate Change. To ...

Citizen scientists contribute vital information about 35 seahorse species: their geographic ranges, habitats, and pregnancy seasonality

Citizen scientists contribute vital information about 35 seahorse species: their geographic ranges, habitats, and pregnancy seasonality
2024-03-25
Thanks to diligent observers, seahorses, those enigmatic and charismatic fish, are not only being discovered in new habitats and expanded geographic ranges, they are also being found at new ocean depths. While their capacity for male pregnancy has long fascinated people, new information on sex ratio and pregnancy seasonality has been discovered by, well, you. Researchers from Project Seahorse – a marine conservation team based at the University of British Columbia (UBC) and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) – identified and reviewed new findings related to 35 of the 46 seahorse species found around the globe, ...

An effective method for improving energy storage performance in (Bi0.5Na0.5)TiO3-based lead-free relaxor ferroelectrics

2024-03-25
Next-generation advanced high/pulsed power capacitors urgently require dielectric materials with outstanding energy storage performance. (Bi0.5Na0.5)TiO3-based material, a typical lead-free ferroelectrics, has the characteristics of high polarization strength and excellent component compatibility, making it emerge as a potential candidate for energy storage applications.   Researchers have made an interesting breakthrough in the modification of the BNT-based ferroelectrics, an effective method for various properties such ...

Online dashboard to help fight to save children from deadly diarrheal diseases

Online dashboard to help fight to save children from deadly diarrheal diseases
2024-03-25
University of Virginia researchers are developing a flexible online tool for navigating information used in the fight to save children from deadly diarrheal diseases by identifying transmission hotspots and accelerating the deployment of treatments and new vaccines. Diarrhea not only kills hundreds of thousands of children around the world every year, it contributes to malnutrition that can prevent kids from growing and developing to their full potential both physically and mentally, trapping them in poverty. While significant progress has been made against the disease in recent years, the UVA researchers say that ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Clinical trial at Emory University reveals twice-yearly injection to be 96% effective in HIV prevention

Discovering the traits of extinct birds

Are health care disparities tied to worse outcomes for kids with MS?

For those with CTE, family history of mental illness tied to aggression in middle age

The sound of traffic increases stress and anxiety

Global food yields have grown steadily during last six decades

Children who grow up with pets or on farms may develop allergies at lower rates because their gut microbiome develops with more anaerobic commensals, per fecal analysis in small cohort study

North American Early Paleoindians almost 13,000 years ago used the bones of canids, felids, and hares to create needles in modern-day Wyoming, potentially to make the tailored fur garments which enabl

Higher levels of democracy and lower levels of corruption are associated with more doctors, independent of healthcare spending, per cross-sectional study of 134 countries

In major materials breakthrough, UVA team solves a nearly 200-year-old challenge in polymers

Wyoming research shows early North Americans made needles from fur-bearers

Preclinical tests show mRNA-based treatments effective for blinding condition

Velcro DNA helps build nanorobotic Meccano

Oceans emit sulfur and cool the climate more than previously thought

Nanorobot hand made of DNA grabs viruses for diagnostics and blocks cell entry

Rare, mysterious brain malformations in children linked to protein misfolding, study finds

Newly designed nanomaterial shows promise as antimicrobial agent

Scientists glue two proteins together, driving cancer cells to self-destruct

Intervention improves the healthcare response to domestic violence in low- and middle-income countries

State-wide center for quantum science: Karlsruhe Institute of Technology joins IQST as a new partner

Cellular traffic congestion in chronic diseases suggests new therapeutic targets

Cervical cancer mortality among US women younger than age 25

Fossil dung reveals clues to dinosaur success story

New research points way to more reliable brain studies

‘Alzheimer’s in dish’ model shows promise for accelerating drug discovery

Ultraprocessed food intake and psoriasis

Race and ethnicity, gender, and promotion of physicians in academic medicine

Testing and masking policies and hospital-onset respiratory viral infections

A matter of life and death

Huge cost savings from more efficient use of CDK4/6 inhibitors in metastatic breast cancer reported in SONIA study

[Press-News.org] Unlocking quantum computing power: automated protocol design for quantum advantage