Digital-Analog Quantum Computation
Digital-analog quantum computation (DAQC) is a universal quantum computing paradigm1, based on two primary computations:
- Fast single-qubit operations (digital).
- Multi-partite entangling operations acting on all qubits (analog).
The DAQC paradigm is typically implemented on quantum computing hardware based on neutral-atoms where both these computations are realizable.
Digital-analog emulation
Qadence simplifies the execution of DAQC programs on either emulated or real neutral-atom devices
by providing a simplified interface for customizing interactions and interfacing
with pulse-level programming in Pulser
3.
Digital-analog transformation
Furthermore, the essence of digital-analog computation is the ability to represent any analog operation, i.e. any arbitrary Hamiltonian, using an auxiliary device-amenable Hamiltonian, such as the ubiquitous Ising model2. This is at the core of the DAQC implementation in Qadence.
References
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Dodd et al., Universal quantum computation and simulation using any entangling Hamiltonian and local unitaries, PRA 65, 040301 (2002). ↩
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Pulser: An open-source package for the design of pulse sequences in programmable neutral-atom arrays ↩
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Parra-Rodriguez et al., Digital-Analog Quantum Computation, PRA 101, 022305 (2020). ↩