70 research outputs found
Multiphoton controllable transport between remote resonators
We develop a novel method for multiphoton controllable transport between
remote resonators. Specifically, an auxiliary resonator is used to control the
coherent long-range coupling of two spatially separated resonators, mediated by
a coupled-resonator chain of arbitrary length. In this manner, an arbitrary
multiphoton quantum state can be either transmitted through or reflected off
the intermediate chain on demand, with very high fidelity. We find, on using a
time-independent perturbative treatment, that quantum information leakage of an
arbitrary Fock state is limited by two upper bounds, one for the transmitted
case and the other for the reflected case. In principle, the two upper bounds
can be made arbitrarily small, which is confirmed by numerical simulations.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
A Full Quantum Eigensolver for Quantum Chemistry Simulations
Quantum simulation of quantum chemistry is one of the most compelling
applications of quantum computing. It is of particular importance in areas
ranging from materials science, biochemistry and condensed matter physics.
Here, we propose a full quantum eigensolver (FQE) algorithm to calculate the
molecular ground energies and electronic structures using quantum gradient
descent. Compared to existing classical-quantum hybrid methods such as
variational quantum eigensolver (VQE), our method removes the classical
optimizer and performs all the calculations on a quantum computer with faster
convergence. The gradient descent iteration depth has a favorable complexity
that is logarithmically dependent on the system size and inverse of the
precision. Moreover, the FQE can be further simplified by exploiting
perturbation theory for the calculations of intermediate matrix elements, and
obtain results with a precision that satisfies the requirement of chemistry
application. The full quantum eigensolver can be implemented on a near-term
quantum computer. With the rapid development of quantum computing hardware, FQE
provides an efficient and powerful tool to solve quantum chemistry problems
Investigation of a non-Hermitian edge burst with time-dependent perturbation theory
Edge burst is a phenomenon in non-Hermitian quantum dynamics discovered by a
recent numerical study [W.-T. Xue, et al, Phys. Rev. Lett 2, 128.120401(2022)].
It finds that a large proportion of particle loss occurs at the system boundary
in a class of non-Hermitian quantum walk. In this paper, we investigate the
evolution of real-space wave functions for this lattice system. We find the
wave function of the edge site is distinct from the bulk sites. Using
time-dependent perturbation theory, we derive the analytical expression of the
real-space wave functions and find that the different evolution behaviors
between the edge and bulk sites are due to their different nearest-neighbor
site configurations. We also find the edge wave function primarily results from
the transition of the two nearest-neighbor non-decay sites. Besides, the
numerical diagonalization shows the edge wave function is mainly propagated by
a group of eigen-modes with a relatively large imaginary part. Our work
provides an analytical method for studying non-Hermitian quantum dynamical
problems.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Dynamics simulation and numerical analysis of arbitrary time-dependent -symmetric system based on density operators and the influence of quantum noises
-symmetric system has attracted extensive attention in recent
years because of its unique properties and applications. How to simulate
-symmetric system in traditional quantum mechanical system has
not only fundamental theoretical significance but also practical value. We
propose a dynamics simulation scheme of arbitrary time-dependent
-symmetric system based on density operators. Based on that, we
further study the influence of quantum noises on the simulation results with
the technique of vectorization of density operators and matrixization of
superoperators (VDMS), and we show the depolarizing (Dep) noise is the most
fatal and should be avoided as much as possible. Meanwhile, we also give a
numerical analysis. Through theoretical analysis and numerical calculation, we
find the problem of chronological product usually has to be solved not only in
the numerical calculation, but also even in the experiment, because the dilated
higher-dimensional Hamiltonian is usually time-dependent. And the solution of
the problem of chronological product is actually one of the key factors to the
accuracy of dynamics simulation of the time-dependent -symmetric
system, and even the most key factor. We prove that the trusted duration of
numerical calculation is actually bounded by the critical time of
convergence of Magnus series, while the implemented duration of experimental
running is actually bounded by the critical time of the legitimacy of
dilation method
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