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A Practical Guide to Quantum Machine Learning and Quantum Optimization

You're reading from  A Practical Guide to Quantum Machine Learning and Quantum Optimization

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804613832
Pages 680 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Elías F. Combarro Elías F. Combarro
Profile icon Elías F. Combarro
Samuel González-Castillo Samuel González-Castillo
Profile icon Samuel González-Castillo
View More author details

Table of Contents (27) Chapters

Preface Part I: I, for One, Welcome our New Quantum Overlords
Chapter 1: Foundations of Quantum Computing Chapter 2: The Tools of the Trade in Quantum Computing Part II: When Time is Gold: Tools for Quantum Optimization
Chapter 3: Working with Quadratic Unconstrained Binary Optimization Problems Chapter 4: Adiabatic Quantum Computing and Quantum Annealing Chapter 5: QAOA: Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm Chapter 6: GAS: Grover Adaptive Search Chapter 7: VQE: Variational Quantum Eigensolver Part III: A Match Made in Heaven: Quantum Machine Learning
Chapter 8: What Is Quantum Machine Learning? Chapter 9: Quantum Support Vector Machines Chapter 10: Quantum Neural Networks Chapter 11: The Best of Both Worlds: Hybrid Architectures Chapter 12: Quantum Generative Adversarial Networks Part IV: Afterword and Appendices
Chapter 13: Afterword: The Future of Quantum Computing
Assessments Bibliography
Index
Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix A: Complex Numbers
Appendix B: Basic Linear Algebra Appendix C: Computational Complexity Appendix D: Installing the Tools Appendix E: Production Notes

7.3 Using VQE with Qiskit

In this section, we will show how we can use Qiskit to run VQE on both simulators and actual quantum hardware. To do that, we will use a problem taken from quantum chemistry: determining the energy of the or dihydrogen molecule. Our first subsection is devoted to defining this problem.

7.3.1 Defining a molecular problem in Qiskit

To illustrate how we can use VQE with Qiskit, we will consider a simple quantum chemistry problem. We will imagine that we have two atoms of hydrogen forming an molecule and that we want to compute its ground state and its energy. For that, we need to obtain the Hamiltonian of the system, which is a little bit different from the kind of Hamiltonian that we are used to. The Hamiltonians that we have considered so far are called qubit Hamiltonians, while the one that we need to describe the energy of the molecule is called a fermionic Hamiltonian — the name comes from the fact that it involves fermions, that is, particles...

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