Litcius/Paper detail

Energetic Perspective on Rapid Quenches in Quantum Annealing

Adam Callison, Max Festenstein, Jie Chen, Laurentiu Nita, Viv Kendon, Nicholas Chancellor

2021PRX Quantum36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There are well-developed theoretical tools to analyze how quantum dynamics can solve computational problems by varying Hamiltonian parameters slowly, near the adiabatic limit. On the other hand, there are relatively few tools to understand the opposite limit of rapid quenches, as used in quantum annealing and (in the limit of infinitely rapid quenches) in quantum walks. In this paper, we develop several tools that are applicable in the rapid-quench regime. Firstly, we analyze the energy expectation value of different elements of the Hamiltonian. From this, we show that monotonic quenches, where the strength of the problem Hamiltonian is consistently increased relative to fluctuation (driver) terms, will yield a better result on average than random guessing. Secondly, we develop methods to determine whether dynamics will occur locally under rapid-quench Hamiltonians and identify cases where a rapid quench will lead to a substantially improved solution. In particular, we find that a technique we refer to as "preannealing" can significantly improve the performance of quantum walks. We also show how these tools can provide efficient heuristic estimates for Hamiltonian parameters, a key requirement for practical application of quantum annealing.

Topics & Concepts

Quantum annealingHamiltonian (control theory)Statistical physicsAdiabatic processQuantumMonotonic functionPhysicsSimulated annealingAdiabatic quantum computationHeuristicComputer scienceQuantum mechanicsMathematical optimizationApplied mathematicsMathematicsQuantum computerMathematical analysisQuantum Computing Algorithms and ArchitectureQuantum and electron transport phenomenaQuantum Information and Cryptography