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Constant Factor Analysis of Optimal Quantum Linear Solvers in Practice

Quantum Physics 2026-04-28 v2

Abstract

Optimal quantum linear equation solvers provide complexity O(κlog(1/ϵ))O(\kappa\log(1/\epsilon)), where κ\kappa is the condition number and ϵ\epsilon is the allowable error. The optimal solver using a discrete adiabatic approach [PRX Quantum 3, 040303 (2022)] has large analytically proven constant factors for the upper bound on the complexity. The constant factors were later found to be about 1,200 times smaller in numerical testing [Quantum 9, 1887 (2025)]. This meant it is about an order of magnitude more efficient than using a randomised approach from [PRX Quantum 6, 040373 (2025)], which has far smaller analytically proven constant factors. Recently, a ``Shortcut'' method has been found to provide an optimal solver which also has small proven constant factors. In the present work, we conduct a comprehensive numerical analysis comparing this method with the adiabatic solver for two families of random linear systems. We find that, in the case where the solution norm is unknown, the adiabatic solver provides slightly better performance. If the solution norm is known, then the shortcut method provides significantly better performance for non-Hermitian matrices.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2604.22185,
  title  = {Constant Factor Analysis of Optimal Quantum Linear Solvers in Practice},
  author = {Pedro C. S. Costa and Alexander M. Dalzell and Dong An and Dominic W. Berry},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2604.22185},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

20 pages, 24 figures

R2 v1 2026-07-01T12:33:17.285Z