English

Continuous-time quantum optimisation without the adiabatic principle

Quantum Physics 2025-03-24 v2

Abstract

Continuous-time quantum algorithms for combinatorial optimisation problems, such as quantum annealing, have previously been motivated by the adiabatic principle. A number of continuous-time approaches exploit dynamics, however, and therefore are no longer physically motivated by the adiabatic principle. In this work, we take Planck's principle as the underlying physical motivation for continuous-time quantum algorithms. Planck's principle states that the energy of an isolated system cannot decrease as the result of a cyclic process. We use this principle to justify monotonic schedules in quantum annealing, which are not adiabatic. This approach also highlights the limitations of reverse quantum annealing in an isolated system.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2407.03910,
  title  = {Continuous-time quantum optimisation without the adiabatic principle},
  author = {Robert J. Banks and Georgios S. Raftis and Dan E. Browne and P. A. Warburton},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2407.03910},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

12 + 13 pages, 9 + 19 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T17:29:12.077Z