William Hinsberg, Joy Cheng, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2010
Green’s function methods lead to ab initio, systematically improvable simulations of molecules and materials while providing access to multiple experimentally observable properties such as the density of states and the spectral function. The calculation of the exact one-particle Green’s function remains a significant challenge for classical computers and was attempted only on very small systems. Here, we present a hybrid quantum-classical algorithm to calculate the imaginary-time one-particle Green’s function. The proposed algorithm combines the variational quantum eigensolver and the quantum subspace expansion methods to calculate Green’s function in Lehmann’s representation. We demonstrate the validity of this algorithm by simulating H2 and H4 on quantum simulators and on IBM’s quantum devices.
William Hinsberg, Joy Cheng, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2010
Elliot Linzer, M. Vetterli
Computing
Renu Tewari, Richard P. King, et al.
IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging 1996
Yvonne Anne Pignolet, Stefan Schmid, et al.
Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science