English

General, efficient, and robust Hamiltonian engineering

Quantum Physics 2025-12-11 v3

Abstract

Implementing the time evolution under a desired target Hamiltonian is critical for various applications in quantum science. Due to the exponential increase in the number of parameters with system size and experimental imperfections, this task can be challenging in quantum many-body settings. We introduce an efficient and robust scheme to engineer arbitrary local many-body Hamiltonians. To this end, our scheme applies single-qubit π\pi or π/2\pi/2 pulses to an always-on system Hamiltonian, which we assume to be native to a given platform. These sequences are constructed by efficiently solving a linear program (LP) which minimizes the total evolution time. In this way, we can engineer target Hamiltonians that are only limited by the locality of the interactions in the system Hamiltonian. Based on average Hamiltonian theory and using robust composite pulses, we make our schemes robust against errors, including finite pulse time errors and various control errors. To demonstrate the performance of our scheme, we provide numerical simulations. In particular, we solve the Hamiltonian engineering problem on a laptop for arbitrary two-local Hamiltonians on a 2D square lattice with 196196 qubits in only 6060 seconds. Moreover, we simulate the engineering of general Heisenberg Hamiltonians from Ising Hamiltonians using imperfect single-qubit pulses for smaller system sizes and achieve a fidelity exceeding 99.9%99.9\%, which is orders of magnitude better than non-robust implementations.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2410.19903,
  title  = {General, efficient, and robust Hamiltonian engineering},
  author = {Pascal Baßler and Markus Heinrich and Martin Kliesch},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.19903},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

20+14 pages, 1 table, 8 figures; published version

R2 v1 2026-06-28T19:36:06.429Z