34 research outputs found
Driver Hamiltonians for constrained optimization in quantum annealing
One of the current major challenges surrounding the use of quantum annealers
for solving practical optimization problems is their inability to encode even
moderately sized problems---the main reason for this being the rigid layout of
their quantum bits as well as their sparse connectivity. In particular, the
implementation of constraints has become a major bottleneck in the embedding of
practical problems, because the latter is typically achieved by adding harmful
penalty terms to the problem Hamiltonian --- a technique that often requires an
`all-to-all' connectivity between the qubits. Recently, a novel technique
designed to obviate the need for penalty terms was suggested; it is based on
the construction of driver Hamiltonians that commute with the constraints of
the problem, rendering the latter constants of motion. In this work we propose
general guidelines for the construction of such driver Hamiltonians given an
arbitrary set of constraints. We illustrate the broad applicability of our
method by analyzing several diverse examples, namely, graph isomorphism,
not-all-equal 3SAT, and the so-called Lechner, Hauke and Zoller constraints. We
also discuss the significance of our approach in the context of current and
future experimental quantum annealers.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Non-Markovianity through Multipartite Correlation Measures
We provide a characterization of memory effects in non-Markovian system-bath
interactions from a quantum information perspective. More specifically, we
establish sufficient conditions for which generalized measures of multipartite
quantum, classical, and total correlations can be used to quantify the degree
of non-Markovianity of a local quantum decohering process. We illustrate our
results by considering the dynamical behavior of the trace-distance
correlations in multi-qubit systems under local dephasing and generalized
amplitude damping.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, v2: Published versio
Shortcut to adiabatic gate teleportation
We introduce a shortcut to the adiabatic gate teleportation model of quantum
computation. More specifically, we determine fast local counterdiabatic
Hamiltonians able to implement teleportation as a universal computational
primitive. In this scenario, we provide the counterdiabatic driving for
arbitrary n-qubit gates, which allows to achieve universality through a variety
of gate sets. Remarkably, our approach maps the superadiabatic Hamiltonian for
an arbitrary n-qubit gate teleportation into the implementation of a rotated
superadiabatic dynamics of an n-qubit state teleportation. This result is
rather general, with the speed of the evolution only dictated by the quantum
speed limit. In particular, we analyze the energetic cost for different
Hamiltonian interpolations in the context of the energy-time complementarity.Comment: .8 pages, 4 figures. v3: Minor changes on text suggested by Referee.
References correcte
Quantum discord in the ground state of spin chains
The ground state of a quantum spin chain is a natural playground for
investigating correlations. Nevertheless, not all correlations are genuinely of
quantum nature. Here we review the recent progress to quantify the
'quantumness' of the correlations throughout the phase diagram of quantum spin
systems. Focusing to one spatial dimension, we discuss the behavior of quantum
discord close to quantum phase transitions. In contrast to the two-spin
entanglement, pairwise discord is effectively long-ranged in critical regimes.
Besides the features of quantum phase transitions, quantum discord is
especially feasible to explore the factorization phenomenon, giving rise to
nontrivial ground classical states in quantum systems. The effects of
spontaneous symmetry breaking are also discussed as well as the identification
of quantum critical points through correlation witnesses.Comment: v2: published version. 24 pages, 12 figures. Special issue "Classical
Vs Quantum correlations in composite systems" edited by L. Amico, S. Bose, V.
Korepin and V. Vedra
Trace-distance correlations for X states and emergence of the pointer basis in Markovian and non-Markovian regimes
We provide analytical expressions for classical and total trace-norm
(Schatten 1-norm) geometric correlations in the case of two-qubit X states. As
an application, we consider the open-system dynamical behavior of such
correlations under phase and generalized amplitude damping evolutions. Then, we
show that geometric classical correlations can characterize the emergence of
the pointer basis of an apparatus subject to decoherence in either Markovian or
non-Markovian regimes. In particular, as a non-Markovian effect, we obtain a
time delay for the information to be retrieved from the apparatus by a
classical observer. Moreover, we show that the set of initial X states
exhibiting sudden transitions in the geometric classical correlation has
nonzero measure.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. v2: Minor corrections. Published versio
Sufficient conditions for adiabaticity in open quantum systems
The adiabatic approximation exhibits wide applicability in quantum mechanics,
providing a simple approach for nontransitional dynamics in quantum systems
governed by slowly varying time-dependent Hamiltonians. However, the standard
adiabatic theorem is specifically derived for closed quantum systems. In a
realistic open system scenario, the inevitable system-reservoir interaction
must be taken into account, which strongly impacts the generalization of the
adiabatic behavior. In this paper, we introduce sufficient conditions for the
adiabatic approximation in open quantum systems. These conditions are simple
yet general, providing a suitable instrument to investigate adiabaticity for
arbitrary initial mixed states evolving under time local master equations. We
first illustrate our results by showing that the adiabatic approximation for
open systems is compatible with the description of quantum thermodynamics at
thermal equilibrium, where irreversible entropy production is vanishing. We
also apply our sufficient conditions as a tool in quantum control, evaluating
the adiabatic behavior for the Hamiltonians of both the Deutsch algorithm and
the Landau-Zener model under decoherence.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Nonadiabatic quantum state engineering driven by fast quench dynamics
There are a number of tasks in quantum information science that exploit
non-transitional adiabatic dynamics. Such a dynamics is bounded by the
adiabatic theorem, which naturally imposes a speed limit in the evolution of
quantum systems. Here, we investigate an approach for quantum state engineering
exploiting a shortcut to the adiabatic evolution, which is based on rapid
quenches in a continuous-time Hamiltonian evolution. In particular, this
procedure is able to provide state preparation faster than the adiabatic
brachistochrone. Remarkably, the evolution time in this approach is shown to be
ultimately limited by its "thermodynamical cost,"provided in terms of the
average work rate (average power) of the quench process. We illustrate this
result in a scenario that can be experimentally implemented in a nuclear
magnetic resonance setup
Maxwell's demons in multipartite quantum correlated systems
We investigate the extraction of thermodynamic work by a Maxwell's demon in a
multipartite quantum correlated system. We begin by adopting the standard model
of a Maxwell's demon as a Turing machine, either in a classical or quantum
setup depending on its ability of implementing classical or quantum conditional
dynamics, respectively. Then, for an n-partite system (A_1, A_2, ..., A_n), we
introduce a protocol of work extraction that bounds the advantage of the
quantum demon over its classical counterpart through the amount of multipartite
quantum correlation present in the system, as measured by a thermal version of
the global quantum discord. This result is illustrated for an arbitrary
n-partite pure state of qubits with Schmidt decomposition, where it is shown
that the thermal global quantum discord exactly quantifies the quantum
advantage. Moreover, we also consider the work extraction via mixed
multipartite states, where examples of tight upper bounds can be obtained.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. v2: Minor corrections. Published versio
Many-body localization transition through pairwise correlations
We investigate the phenomenon of spatial many-body localization (MBL) through
pairwise correlation measures based on one and two-point correlation functions.
The system considered is the Heisenberg spin-1/2 chain with exchange
interaction and random onsite disorder of strength . As a representative
pairwise correlation measure obtained from one-point functions only, we use
global entanglement. Through its finite size scaling analysis, we locate the
MBL critical point at . As for measures involving two-point
functions, we analyze pairwise geometric classical, quantum, and total
correlations. Similarly to what happens for continuous quantum phase
transitions, it is the derivatives of these two-point correlation measures that
identify the MBL critical point, which is found to be in the range . Our approach relies on very simple measures that do not
require access to multipartite entanglement or large portions of the system.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Eigenstate Tracking in Open Quantum Systems
Keeping a quantum system in a given instantaneous eigenstate is a control
problem with numerous applications, e.g., in quantum information processing.
The problem is even more challenging in the setting of open quantum systems,
where environment-mediated transitions introduce additional decoherence
channels. Adiabatic passage is a well established solution, but requires a
sufficiently slow evolution time that is dictated by the adiabatic theorem.
Here we develop a systematic projection theory formulation for the
transitionless evolution of general open quantum systems described by
time-local master equations. We derive a time-convolutionless dynamical
equation for the target instantaneous eigenstate of a given time-dependent
Hamiltonian. A transitionless dynamics then arises in terms of a competition
between the average Hamiltonian gap and the decoherence rate, which implies
optimal adiabaticity timescales. We show how eigenstate tracking can be
accomplished via control pulses, without explicitly incorporating
counter-diabatic driving, thus offering an alternative route to shortcuts to
adiabaticity. We examine rectangular pulses, chaotic signals, and white noise,
and find that, remarkably, the effectiveness of eigenstate tracking hardly
depends on the details of the control functions. In all cases the control
protocol keeps the system in the desired instantaneous eigenstate throughout
the entire evolution, along an accelerated adiabatic path.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure