def _compute_num_cnots(U): r"""Compute the number of CNOTs required to implement a U in SU(4). This is based on the trace of .. math:: \gamma(U) = (E^\dag U E) (E^\dag U E)^T, and follows the arguments of this paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0308045. """ u = math.dot(Edag, math.dot(U, E)) gammaU = math.dot(u, math.T(u)) trace = math.trace(gammaU) # Case: 0 CNOTs (tensor product), the trace is +/- 4 # We need a tolerance of around 1e-7 here in order to work with the case where U # is specified with 8 decimal places. if math.allclose(trace, 4, atol=1e-7) or math.allclose( trace, -4, atol=1e-7): return 0 # To distinguish between 1/2 CNOT cases, we need to look at the eigenvalues evs = math.linalg.eigvals(gammaU) sorted_evs = math.sort(math.imag(evs)) # Case: 1 CNOT, the trace is 0, and the eigenvalues of gammaU are [-1j, -1j, 1j, 1j] # Checking the eigenvalues is needed because of some special 2-CNOT cases that yield # a trace 0. if math.allclose(trace, 0j, atol=1e-7) and math.allclose( sorted_evs, [-1, -1, 1, 1]): return 1 # Case: 2 CNOTs, the trace has only a real part (or is 0) if math.allclose(math.imag(trace), 0.0, atol=1e-7): return 2 # For the case with 3 CNOTs, the trace is a non-zero complex number # with both real and imaginary parts. return 3
def _decomposition_3_cnots(U, wires): r"""The most general form of this decomposition is U = (A \otimes B) V (C \otimes D), where V is as depicted in the circuit below: -╭U- = -C--╭X--RZ(d)--╭C---------╭X--A- -╰U- = -D--╰C--RY(b)--╰X--RY(a)--╰C--B- """ # First we add a SWAP as per v1 of arXiv:0308033, which helps with some # rearranging of gates in the decomposition (it will cancel out the fact # that we need to add a SWAP to fix the determinant in another part later). swap_U = np.exp(1j * np.pi / 4) * math.dot(math.cast_like(SWAP, U), U) # Choose the rotation angles of RZ, RY in the two-qubit decomposition. # They are chosen as per Proposition V.1 in quant-ph/0308033 and are based # on the phases of the eigenvalues of :math:`E^\dagger \gamma(U) E`, where # \gamma(U) = (E^\dag U E) (E^\dag U E)^T. # The rotation angles can be computed as follows (any three eigenvalues can be used) u = math.dot(Edag, math.dot(swap_U, E)) gammaU = math.dot(u, math.T(u)) evs, _ = math.linalg.eig(gammaU) # We will sort the angles so that results are consistent across interfaces. angles = math.sort([math.angle(ev) for ev in evs]) x, y, z = angles[0], angles[1], angles[2] # Compute functions of the eigenvalues; there are different options in v1 # vs. v3 of the paper, I'm not entirely sure why. This is the version from v3. alpha = (x + y) / 2 beta = (x + z) / 2 delta = (z + y) / 2 # This is the interior portion of the decomposition circuit interior_decomp = [ qml.CNOT(wires=[wires[1], wires[0]]), qml.RZ(delta, wires=wires[0]), qml.RY(beta, wires=wires[1]), qml.CNOT(wires=wires), qml.RY(alpha, wires=wires[1]), qml.CNOT(wires=[wires[1], wires[0]]), ] # We need the matrix representation of this interior part, V, in order to # decompose U = (A \otimes B) V (C \otimes D) # # Looking at the decomposition above, V has determinant -1 (because there # are 3 CNOTs, each with determinant -1). The relationship between U and V # requires that both are in SU(4), so we add a SWAP after to V. We will see # how this gets fixed later. # # -╭V- = -╭X--RZ(d)--╭C---------╭X--╭SWAP- # -╰V- = -╰C--RY(b)--╰X--RY(a)--╰C--╰SWAP- RZd = qml.RZ(math.cast_like(delta, 1j), wires=wires[0]).matrix RYb = qml.RY(beta, wires=wires[0]).matrix RYa = qml.RY(alpha, wires=wires[0]).matrix V_mats = [ CNOT10, math.kron(RZd, RYb), CNOT01, math.kron(math.eye(2), RYa), CNOT10, SWAP ] V = math.convert_like(math.eye(4), U) for mat in V_mats: V = math.dot(math.cast_like(mat, U), V) # Now we need to find the four SU(2) operations A, B, C, D A, B, C, D = _extract_su2su2_prefactors(swap_U, V) # At this point, we have the following: # -╭U-╭SWAP- = --C--╭X-RZ(d)-╭C-------╭X-╭SWAP--A # -╰U-╰SWAP- = --D--╰C-RZ(b)-╰X-RY(a)-╰C-╰SWAP--B # # Using the relationship that SWAP(A \otimes B) SWAP = B \otimes A, # -╭U-╭SWAP- = --C--╭X-RZ(d)-╭C-------╭X--B--╭SWAP- # -╰U-╰SWAP- = --D--╰C-RZ(b)-╰X-RY(a)-╰C--A--╰SWAP- # # Now the SWAPs cancel, giving us the desired decomposition # (up to a global phase). # -╭U- = --C--╭X-RZ(d)-╭C-------╭X--B-- # -╰U- = --D--╰C-RZ(b)-╰X-RY(a)-╰C--A-- A_ops = zyz_decomposition(A, wires[1]) B_ops = zyz_decomposition(B, wires[0]) C_ops = zyz_decomposition(C, wires[0]) D_ops = zyz_decomposition(D, wires[1]) # Return the full decomposition return C_ops + D_ops + interior_decomp + A_ops + B_ops
def _decomposition_2_cnots(U, wires): r"""If 2 CNOTs are required, we can write the circuit as -╭U- = -A--╭X--RZ(d)--╭X--C- -╰U- = -B--╰C--RX(p)--╰C--D- We need to find the angles for the Z and X rotations such that the inner part has the same spectrum as U, and then we can recover A, B, C, D. """ # Compute the rotation angles u = math.dot(Edag, math.dot(U, E)) gammaU = math.dot(u, math.T(u)) evs, _ = math.linalg.eig(gammaU) # These choices are based on Proposition III.3 of # https://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0308045 # There is, however, a special case where the circuit has the form # -╭U- = -A--╭C--╭X--C- # -╰U- = -B--╰X--╰C--D- # # or some variant of this, where the two CNOTs are adjacent. # # What happens here is that the set of evs is -1, -1, 1, 1 and we can write # -╭U- = -A--╭X--SZ--╭X--C- # -╰U- = -B--╰C--SX--╰C--D- # where SZ and SX are square roots of Z and X respectively. (This # decomposition comes from using Hadamards to flip the direction of the # first CNOT, and then decomposing them and merging single-qubit gates.) For # some reason this case is not handled properly with the full algorithm, so # we treat it separately. sorted_evs = math.sort(math.real(evs)) if math.allclose(sorted_evs, [-1, -1, 1, 1]): interior_decomp = [ qml.CNOT(wires=[wires[1], wires[0]]), qml.S(wires=wires[0]), qml.SX(wires=wires[1]), qml.CNOT(wires=[wires[1], wires[0]]), ] # S \otimes SX inner_matrix = S_SX else: # For the non-special case, the eigenvalues come in conjugate pairs. # We need to find two non-conjugate eigenvalues to extract the angles. x = math.angle(evs[0]) y = math.angle(evs[1]) # If it was the conjugate, grab a different eigenvalue. if math.allclose(x, -y): y = math.angle(evs[2]) delta = (x + y) / 2 phi = (x - y) / 2 interior_decomp = [ qml.CNOT(wires=[wires[1], wires[0]]), qml.RZ(delta, wires=wires[0]), qml.RX(phi, wires=wires[1]), qml.CNOT(wires=[wires[1], wires[0]]), ] RZd = qml.RZ(math.cast_like(delta, 1j), wires=0).matrix RXp = qml.RX(phi, wires=0).matrix inner_matrix = math.kron(RZd, RXp) # We need the matrix representation of this interior part, V, in order to # decompose U = (A \otimes B) V (C \otimes D) V = math.dot(math.cast_like(CNOT10, U), math.dot(inner_matrix, math.cast_like(CNOT10, U))) # Now we find the A, B, C, D in SU(2), and return the decomposition A, B, C, D = _extract_su2su2_prefactors(U, V) A_ops = zyz_decomposition(A, wires[0]) B_ops = zyz_decomposition(B, wires[1]) C_ops = zyz_decomposition(C, wires[0]) D_ops = zyz_decomposition(D, wires[1]) return C_ops + D_ops + interior_decomp + A_ops + B_ops