The fundamental problem faced in quantum chemistry is the calculation of molecular properties, which are of practical importance in fields ranging from materials science to biochemistry. Within chemical precision, the total energy of a molecule as well as most other properties, can be calculated by solving the Schrödinger equation. However, the computational resources required to obtain exact solutions on a conventional computer generally increase exponentially with the number of atoms involved 1,2 . This renders such calculations intractable for all but the smallest of systems. Recently, an efficient algorithm has been proposed enabling a quantum computer to overcome this problem by achieving only a polynomial resource scaling with system size 2,3,4 . Such a tool would therefore provide an extremely powerful tool for new science and technology. Here we present a photonic implementation for the smallest problem: obtaining the energies of H 2 , the hydrogen molecule in a minimal basis. We perform a key algorithmic step-the iterative phase estimation algorithm 5,6,7,8 -in full, achieving a high level of precision and robustness to error. We implement other algorithmic steps with assistance from a classical computer and explain how this non-scalable approach could be avoided. Finally, we provide new theoretical results which lay the foundations for the next generation of simulation experiments using quantum computers. We have made early experimental progress towards the long-term goal of exploiting quantum information to speed up quantum chemistry calculations.Experimentalists are just beginning to command the level of control over quantum systems required to explore their information processing capabilities. An important long-term application is to simulate and calculate properties of other many-body quantum systems. Pioneering experiments were first performed using nuclear-magnetic-resonance-based systems to simulate quantum oscillators 9 , leading up to recent simulations of a pairing Hamiltonian 7,10 . Very recently the phase transitions of a two-spin quantum magnet were simulated 11 using an ion-trap system. Here we simulate a quantum chemical system and calculate its energy spectrum, using a photonic system. Molecular energies are represented as the eigenvalues of an associated time-independent HamiltonianĤ and can be efficiently obtained to fixed accuracy, using a quantum algorithm with three distinct steps 6 : encoding a molecular wavefunction into qubits; simulating its time evolution using quantum logic gates; and extracting the approximate energy using the phase estimation algorithm 3,12 . The latter is a general-purpose quantum algorithm for evaluating the eigenvalues of arbitrary Hermitian or unitary operators. The algorithm estimates the phase, φ, accumulated by a molecular eigenstate, |Ψ , under the action of the time-evolution operator,Û =e −iĤt/ , i.e.,where E is the energy eigenvalue of |Ψ . Therefore, estimating the phase for each eigenstate amounts to estimating the eigenvalues of the Hamiltonia...
Quantum steering allows two parties to verify shared entanglement even if one measurement device is untrusted. A conclusive demonstration of steering through the violation of a steering inequality is of considerable fundamental interest and opens up applications in quantum communication. To date, all experimental tests with single-photon states have relied on post selection, allowing untrusted devices to cheat by hiding unfavourable events in losses. Here we close this 'detection loophole' by combining a highly efficient source of entangled photon pairs with superconducting transition-edge sensors. We achieve an unprecedented ∼62% conditional detection efficiency of entangled photons and violate a steering inequality with the minimal number of measurement settings by 48 s.d.s. Our results provide a clear path to practical applications of steering and to a photonic loophole-free Bell test.
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