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Complexity of simulating quantum systems on classical computers

Complexity of simulating quantum systems on classical computers. Barbara Terhal IBM Research. Computational Quantum Physics.

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Complexity of simulating quantum systems on classical computers

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  1. Complexity of simulating quantum systems on classical computers Barbara Terhal IBM Research

  2. Computational Quantum Physics • Computational quantum physicists (in condensed-matter physics, quantum chemistry etc.) have been in the business of showing how to simulate and understand properties of many-body quantum systems using a classical computer. • Heuristic and ad-hoc methods dominate, but the claim has been that these methods often work well in practice. • Quantum information science has and will contribute to computational • quantum physics in several ways: • Come up with better simulation algorithms • Make rigorous what is done heuristically/approximately in computational physics. • Delineate the boundary between what is possible and what is not. That is: • show that certain problems are hard for classical (or even quantum) computers • in a complexity sense.

  3. Physically-Relevant Quantum States local interactions are between O(1) degrees of freedom (e.g. qubits)

  4. Efficient Classical Descriptions

  5. Matrix Product States

  6. 1st Generalization: Tree Tensor Product States

  7. 2nd Generalization: Tensor Product States or PEPS

  8. Properties of MPS and Tree-TPS

  9. Properties of tensor product states PEPS and TPS perhaps too general for classical simulation purposes

  10. Quantum Circuit Point of View Past Light Cone Max width

  11. Quantum Circuit Point of View

  12. Quantum Circuit Point of View

  13. Area Law

  14. Classical Simulations of Dynamics

  15. Lieb-Robinson Bounds Lieb-Robinson Bound: Commutator of operator A with backwards propagated B decays exponentially with distance between A and B, when A is outside B’s effective past light-cone. Bulk Past Light Cone A B

  16. Stoquastic Hamiltonians

  17. Examples of Stoquastic Hamiltonians Particles in a potential; Hamiltonian is a sum of a diagonal potential term in position |x> and off-diagonal negative kinetic terms (-d2/dx2). All of classical and quantum mechanics. Quantum transverse Ising model Ferromagnetic Heisenberg models (modeling interacting spins on lattices) Jaynes-Cummings Hamiltonian (describing atom-laser interaction), spin-boson model, bosonic Hubbard models, Bose-Einstein condensates etc. D-Wave’s Orion quantum computer… Non-stoquastic are typically fermionic systems, charged particles in a magnetic field. Stoquastic Hamiltonians are ubiquitous in nature. Note that we only consider ground-state properties of these Hamiltonians.

  18. Stoquastic Hamiltonians

  19. Frustration-Free Stoquastic Hamiltonians

  20. Conclusion

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