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Published January 2024 | Published
Journal Article Open

Sparse Random Hamiltonians Are Quantumly Easy

Abstract

A candidate application for quantum computers is to simulate the low-temperature properties of quantum systems. For this task, there is a well-studied quantum algorithm that performs quantum phase estimation on an initial trial state that has a non-negligible overlap with a low-energy state. However, it is notoriously hard to give theoretical guarantees that such a trial state can be prepared efficiently. Moreover, the heuristic proposals that are currently available, such as with adiabatic state preparation, appear insufficient in practical cases. This paper shows that, for most random sparse Hamiltonians, the maximally mixed state is a sufficiently good trial state, and phase estimation efficiently prepares states with energy arbitrarily close to the ground energy. Furthermore, any low-energy state must have non-negligible quantum circuit complexity, suggesting that low-energy states are classically nontrivial and phase estimation is the optimal method for preparing such states (up to polynomial factors). These statements hold for two models of random Hamiltonians: (i) a sum of random signed Pauli strings and (ii) a random signed 𝑑-sparse Hamiltonian. The main technical argument is based on some new results in nonasymptotic random matrix theory. In particular, a refined concentration bound for the spectral density is required to obtain complexity guarantees for these random Hamiltonians.

Copyright and License

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI.

Acknowledgement

We thank Thomas Vidick, John Preskill, Anand Natarajan, John Wright, Gil Refael, Mehdi Soleimanifar, András Gilyén, Sam McArdle, William Kretschmer, Michael Kastoryano, Hsin-Yuan (Robert) Huang, Leo Zhou, Nicola Pancotti, and Robbie King for helpful discussions. C. F. C. is supported by the Eddlemen Fellowship and AWS Center for Quantum Computing summer intern program. During this project, M. B. was additionally affiliated with the AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Pasadena, USA. J. A. T. was supported in part by ONR BRC Grant No. N00014-18-1-2363 and NSF FRG Grant No. 1952777. M. B. is supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council of the UK (EPSRC) Grant No. EP/W032643/1.

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Additional details

Created:
July 5, 2024
Modified:
July 5, 2024