Simulating plasma wave propagation on a superconducting quantum chip

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum computers may one day enable the efficient simulation of strongly-coupled plasmas that lie beyond the reach of classical computation in regimes where quantum effects are important and the scale separation is large. We take the first step towards efficient simulation of quantum plasmas by demonstrating linear plasma wave propagation on a superconducting quantum chip. Using high-fidelity and highly expressive device-native gates, combined with a novel error mitigation technique, we simulate the scattering of laser pulses from inhomogeneous plasmas. Our approach is made feasible by the identification of a suitable local spin model whose excitations mimic plasma waves, whose circuit implementation requires a lower gate count than other proposed approaches that would require a future fault-tolerant quantum computer. This work opens avenues to study more complicated phenomena that cannot be simulated efficiently on classical computers, such as nonlinear quantum dynamics when strongly-coupled plasmas are driven out of equilibrium.

*This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, under award number DE-SC0021661, SCW1736 and SCW1680, and DE-SC0020393. The work by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory was performed under the auspices of the US Department of Energy (DOE) under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344.

Publication: arXiv:2507.09479

Presenters

  • Bhuvanesh Sundar

    • Rigetti Computing

Authors

  • Bhuvanesh Sundar

    • Rigetti Computing
  • Bram Evert

    • Rigetti Computing
  • Vasily I Geyko

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Andrew D Patterson

    • Rigetti Computing
  • Ilon Joseph

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Yuan Shi

    • University of Colorado Boulder