Published November 2025 | Version Published
Journal Article

Commuting Local Hamiltonian Problem on 2D Beyond Qubits

  • 1. ROR icon University of California, Irvine
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

We study the complexity of local Hamiltonians in which the terms pairwise commute. Commuting local Hamiltonians (CLHs) provide a way to study the role of non-commutativity in the complexity of quantum systems and touch on many fundamental aspects of quantum computing and many-body systems, such as the quantum PCP conjecture and the area law. Much of the recent research has focused on the physically motivated 2D case, where particles are located on vertices of a 2D grid and each term acts non-trivially only on the particles on a single square (or plaquette) in the lattice. In particular, Schuch showed that the CLH problem on 2D with qubits is in NP. Resolving the complexity of the 2D CLH problem with higher dimensional particles has been elusive. We prove two results for the CLH problem in 2D: We give a non-constructive proof that the CLH problem in 2D with qutrits is in NP. As far as we know, this is the first result for the commuting local Hamiltonian problem on 2D beyond qubits. Our key lemma works for general qudits and might give new insights for tackling the general case. We consider the factorized case, also studied by Bravyi and Vyalyi, where each term is a tensor product of single-particle Hermitian operators. We show that a factorized CLH in 2D, even on particles of arbitrary finite dimension, is equivalent to a direct sum of qubit stabilizer Hamiltonians. This implies that the factorized 2D CLH problem is in NP.

Copyright and License

© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2025.

Acknowledgement

We thank Thomas Vidick and Daniel Ranard for their helpful discussions. Jiaqing Jiang is supported by MURI Grant FA9550-18-1-0161 and the IQIM, an NSF Physics Frontiers Center (NSF Grant PHY-1125565). This work was done in part while the author was visiting the Simons Institute for the Theory of Computing, supported by DOE QSA grant #FP00010905.

Funding

Jiaqing Jiang is supported by MURI Grant FA9550-18-1-0161 and the IQIM, an NSF Physics Frontiers Center (NSF Grant PHY-1125565). This work was done in part while the author was visiting the Simons Institute for the Theory of Computing, supported by DOE QSA grant #FP00010905.

Additional details

Related works

Describes
Journal Article: https://rdcu.be/eKPK3 (ReadCube)
Is new version of
Discussion Paper: arXiv:2309.04910 (arXiv)

Funding

Office of Naval Research
FA9550-18-1-0161
National Science Foundation
PHY-1125565
United States Department of Energy
FP00010905

Dates

Accepted
2025-09-02
Available
2025-10-03
Published online

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, Division of Engineering and Applied Science (EAS)
Publication Status
Published