Curator's Take
An interesting development in hardware. This article from arXiv Quantum Physics covers recent progress that may have implications for the broader quantum computing field.
— Mark Eatherly
Summary
Quantum circuit equivalence checking asks whether two circuits implement the same unitary. It guarantees compiler correctness and safe optimization, yet most existing approaches scale exponentially with the number of qubits or the circuit depth, or are restricted to specific circuit structures. In this work, we present an equivalence-checking method for circuits formed by arbitrary single-qubit layers interleaved with Clifford layers. This pattern is common in variational quantum algorithms and Hamiltonian simulation via Trotter decomposition. It can also represent any unitary with sufficient depth. We prove the existence of an efficient classical algorithm that determines whether a pair of circuits with shared single-qubit layers are equivalent for every possible choice of the shared single-qubit unitaries. The same algorithm can also certify their non-equivalence for fixed assignments of single-qubit unitaries. Our framework supports the validation of emerging quantum compilers and facilitate the discovery of novel circuit optimization passes.