2013.09.13 quantum computing has arrived s.nechuiviter

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Quantum computing has arrived

Sergii Nechuiviter AI Club

This lecture is NOT about:• Quantum mechanics• Mathematics• Algorithm complexity

It mostly about state of industry of quantum computing

Quantum computing?

And what?

Practical applications• Hacking open-key cryptography• PageRank (Google in a Quantum Network)• Searching a database of molecules• Lattice protein folding• Sentiment analysis• Car detection• Labeling of news stories and images• Video compression• Machine creativity• Physics simulation

(30 quantum particles simulation is limit to our days computers)

If it is so cool

Why haven`t I heard about it?

Brief recognized history of quantum computation research

• In 1981 Richard Feynman described a theoretical device that he called a “quantum computer”• In 1994 Peter Shor described the first quantum algorithm• In 1993 Seth Lloyd proposed the first feasible design for a quantum computer• In 1998 IBM-Berkeley, Gershenfeld, Isaac Chuang, Mark Kubinec – the first real experiment: 2 qubits• In 2001 IBM-MIT Chuang a 7-qubit NMR computer (prime factors of 15)• In 2000 MIT Edward Farhi, Jeffrey Goldstone, Michael Sipser, Northeastern’s Sam Gutmann

proposed an adiabatic quantum computer• In 2005 IBM, Hewlett-Packard and NEC not seems likely to deliver a working machine in less than 10 years.• In 2007 Japanese electronics giant NEC Corp, controlled 2-qubit coupling• In 2011 University of California, 2 qubits, quantum bas, 2 quantum RAM

arxiv.org/abs/1109.3743: Implementing the Quantum von Neumann Architecture with Superconducting Circuits• In 2011, arxiv.org/abs/1103.1528: A Single-Atom Quantum Memory, can store qubits for only 180 microseconds and

has an overall efficiency of 9 per cent• In 2011 Experimental realisation of Shor's quantum factoring algorithm using qubit recycling, 1 qubit• In 2011 IBM-MIT Chuang factorized 143 using 4 qubits• In 2012 IBM-Yale stated that they work on 3D qubits• In 2012 arxiv.org/abs/1205.4899: Controlled-NOT Gate Operating With Single Photons• In 2013 University of New South Wales in Sydney, single phosphorus atom in silicon (Kane design, 1998)

State of the Art: Grail of quantum computing research

NIST quantum simulator (350 qubit)

Rose’s Law: D-Wave success story

Dairy CowResearch here?

D-Wave impact• 2006 4 qubit Calipso• 2007 16-qubit Europa II/Orion demonstration of “the world’s first commercial adiabatic quantum computer.”• 2008 28-qubit Leda• 2011 128-qubit Rainer based “D-Wave One” for Lockheed Martin• In 2011 University of California, 2 qubits, quantum bas, 2 quantum RAM

arxiv.org/abs/1109.3743: Implementing the Quantum von Neumann Architecture with Superconducting Circuits• In 2011, arxiv.org/abs/1103.1528: A Single-Atom Quantum Memory, can store qubits for only 180 microseconds

and has an overall efficiency of 9 per cent• In 2011 Experimental realisation of Shor's quantum factoring algorithm using qubit recycling, 1 qubit• In 2011 IBM-MIT Chuang factorized 143 using 4 qubits• In 2012 IBM-Yale stated that they work on 3D qubits• In 2012 arxiv.org/abs/1205.4899: Controlled-NOT Gate Operating With Single Photons• In 2012 NIST 350-qubit quantum simulator (news link)• In 2013 University of New South Wales in Sydney, single phosphorus atom in silicon (Kane design, 1998)• 2013, upgrade to the 512-qubit D-Wave Two for LM • 2013 USC Dr. Daniel Lidar about error correction• 2013, 512-qubit D-Wave Two for The Google / NASA Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab

Applying for time on the D-Wave Two at the Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab here• 2013 As of September 20, the quantum photonic processor housed at the Centre for Quantum Photonics at the

University of Bristol will be available to researchers from anywhere in the world via remote access over the Internet

D-Wave’s Quantum Computer Goes to the Races, Wins

• 1999 D-Wave’s technology has been dogged by controversy during the 14 years (from 1999) it has been in development, with quantum computing researchers questioning whether the company’s technology truly is exploiting quantum effects.

• In 2009 Google post “NIPS 2009 Demonstration: Binary Classification using Hardware Implementation of Quantum Annealing” for car detection, 100ms per iteration, QBoost

• 2011 Nature “Quantum annealing with manufactured spins”• 2012 84 qubits Experimental Determination Of Ramsey Numbers With Quantum

Annealing in 250 ms• 2013 A team of scientists at USC has verified that quantum effects are indeed at play

in the first commercial quantum optimization processor.• 2013 Catherine McGeoch, Amherst College

D-Wave vs Lenovo workstation with a 2.4GHz quad core Intel processor, 16GB RAM Quadratic unconstrained binary optimization (NP hard) about 3,600 times more quickly: <½ seconds vs 30 minutes

Okay, it is fast

What is this D-Wave exactly?

Watch videoD-Wave Systems 128 qubit processor - Inside the chiphttp://youtu.be/PqSgmCg1kew

Superconducting loop qubit

How does quantum mechanics help?

Principle of adiabatic computation

8 qubit cell

Chimera 4x4x8=128 qubit topology

Vesuvius 8x8x8=512 qubit topology

Calibrating two D-Wave Two

Lovely

How can it be programmed?

Something familiar?

The crux of the matter

The energy program

Software stack of D-Wave

The Blackbox compiler

Tasks which can be solved• Travelling salesman• Hadamar matrix search• Eternity II puzzle• Weighted Maximum Independent Set• Molecule Maximum Common Graph• Quantum feature learning• Binary classifier• Neural networks• NAND gate• Physics simulation• Etc.

Quantum computing has already arrived

ANNEX

The light switch game

Bias summand

Interaction summand

8

14

79

13

10

3

6

1

12

11

2

4

5

Evaluating Ramsey number R(3,3)

Note that the Ramsey experiments were carried out with an annealing time of 1000µs per run.

Example: Embedding of the primal graph of into hardware. (128 qubit chip used)

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