Implementing a Fast Unbounded Quantum Fanout Gate Using Power-Law Interactions

Abstract

The standard circuit model for quantum computation presumes the ability to directly perform gates between arbitrary pairs of qubits, which is unlikely to be practical for large-scale experiments. Power-law interactions with strength decaying as 1/rα1/r^\alpha in the distance rr provide an experimentally realizable resource for information processing, whilst still retaining long-range connectivity. We leverage the power of these interactions to implement a fast quantum fanout gate with an arbitrary number of targets. Our implementation allows the quantum Fourier transform (QFT) and Shor's algorithm to be performed on a DD-dimensional lattice in time logarithmic in the number of qubits for interactions with α≤D\alpha \le D. As a corollary, we show that power-law systems with α≤D\alpha \le D are difficult to simulate classically even for short times, under a standard assumption that factoring is classically intractable. Complementarily, we develop a new technique to give a general lower bound, linear in the size of the system, on the time required to implement the QFT and the fanout gate in systems that are constrained by a linear light cone. This allows us to prove an asymptotically tighter lower bound for long-range systems than is possible with previously available techniques.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur

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