69 research outputs found
Quantum simulation of classical thermal states
We establish a connection between ground states of local quantum Hamiltonians
and thermal states of classical spin systems. For any discrete classical
statistical mechanical model in any spatial dimension, we find an associated
quantum state such that the reduced density operator behaves as the thermal
state of the classical system. We show that all these quantum states are unique
ground states of a universal 5-body local quantum Hamiltonian acting on a
(polynomially enlarged) system of qubits arranged on a 2D lattice. The only
free parameters of the quantum Hamiltonian are coupling strengthes of two-body
interactions, which allow one to choose the type and dimension of the classical
model as well as the interaction strength and temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Ising models and topological codes: classical algorithms and quantum simulation
We present an algorithm to approximate partition functions of 3-body
classical Ising models on two-dimensional lattices of arbitrary genus, in the
real-temperature regime. Even though our algorithm is purely classical, it is
designed by exploiting a connection to topological quantum systems, namely the
color codes. The algorithm performance is exponentially better than other
approaches which employ mappings between partition functions and quantum state
overlaps. In addition, our approach gives rise to a protocol for quantum
simulation of such Ising models by simply measuring local observables on color
codes.Comment: 5 pages + supplementary materia
Classical spin systems and the quantum stabilizer formalism: general mappings and applications
We present general mappings between classical spin systems and quantum
physics. More precisely, we show how to express partition functions and
correlation functions of arbitrary classical spin models as inner products
between quantum stabilizer states and product states, thereby generalizing
mappings for some specific models established in [Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 117207
(2007)]. For Ising- and Potts-type models with and without external magnetic
field, we show how the entanglement features of the corresponding stabilizer
states are related to the interaction pattern of the classical model, while the
choice of product states encodes the details of interaction. These mappings
establish a link between the fields of classical statistical mechanics and
quantum information theory, which we utilize to transfer techniques and methods
developed in one field to gain insight into the other. For example, we use
quantum information techniques to recover well known duality relations and
local symmetries of classical models in a simple way, and provide new classical
simulation methods to simulate certain types of classical spin models. We show
that in this way all inhomogeneous models of q-dimensional spins with pairwise
interaction pattern specified by a graph of bounded tree-width can be simulated
efficiently. Finally, we show relations between classical spin models and
measurement-based quantum computation.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, minor corrections, version as accepted in JM
Classical simulation versus universality in measurement based quantum computation
We investigate for which resource states an efficient classical simulation of
measurement based quantum computation is possible. We show that the
Schmidt--rank width, a measure recently introduced to assess universality of
resource states, plays a crucial role in also this context. We relate
Schmidt--rank width to the optimal description of states in terms of tree
tensor networks and show that an efficient classical simulation of measurement
based quantum computation is possible for all states with logarithmically
bounded Schmidt--rank width (with respect to the system size). For graph states
where the Schmidt--rank width scales in this way, we efficiently construct the
optimal tree tensor network descriptions, and provide several examples. We
highlight parallels in the efficient description of complex systems in quantum
information theory and graph theory.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Graph states as ground states of many-body spin-1/2 Hamiltonians
We consider the problem whether graph states can be ground states of local
interaction Hamiltonians. For Hamiltonians acting on n qubits that involve at
most two-body interactions, we show that no n-qubit graph state can be the
exact, non-degenerate ground state. We determine for any graph state the
minimal d such that it is the non-degenerate ground state of a d-body
interaction Hamiltonian, while we show for d'-body Hamiltonians H with d'<d
that the resulting ground state can only be close to the graph state at the
cost of H having a small energy gap relative to the total energy. When allowing
for ancilla particles, we show how to utilize a gadget construction introduced
in the context of the k-local Hamiltonian problem, to obtain n-qubit graph
states as non-degenerate (quasi-)ground states of a two-body Hamiltonian acting
on n'>n spins.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
Quantum algorithms for classical lattice models
We give efficient quantum algorithms to estimate the partition function of
(i) the six vertex model on a two-dimensional (2D) square lattice, (ii) the
Ising model with magnetic fields on a planar graph, (iii) the Potts model on a
quasi 2D square lattice, and (iv) the Z_2 lattice gauge theory on a
three-dimensional square lattice. Moreover, we prove that these problems are
BQP-complete, that is, that estimating these partition functions is as hard as
simulating arbitrary quantum computation. The results are proven for a complex
parameter regime of the models. The proofs are based on a mapping relating
partition functions to quantum circuits introduced in [Van den Nest et al.,
Phys. Rev. A 80, 052334 (2009)] and extended here.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figure
Completeness of the classical 2D Ising model and universal quantum computation
We prove that the 2D Ising model is complete in the sense that the partition
function of any classical q-state spin model (on an arbitrary graph) can be
expressed as a special instance of the partition function of a 2D Ising model
with complex inhomogeneous couplings and external fields. In the case where the
original model is an Ising or Potts-type model, we find that the corresponding
2D square lattice requires only polynomially more spins w.r.t the original one,
and we give a constructive method to map such models to the 2D Ising model. For
more general models the overhead in system size may be exponential. The results
are established by connecting classical spin models with measurement-based
quantum computation and invoking the universality of the 2D cluster states.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. Minor change
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