Quantum Algorithmic Measurement
Abstract
We initiate the systematic study of experimental quantum physics from the perspective of computational complexity. To this end, we define the framework of quantum algorithmic measurements (QUALMs), a hybrid of black box quantum algorithms and interactive protocols. We use the QUALM framework to study two important experimental problems in quantum many-body physics: determining whether a system's Hamiltonian is time-independent or time-dependent, and determining the symmetry class of the dynamics of the system. We study abstractions of these problem and show for both cases that if the experimentalist can use her experimental samples coherently (in both space and time), a provable exponential speedup is achieved compared to the standard situation in which each experimental sample is accessed separately. Our work suggests that quantum computers can provide a new type of exponential advantage: exponential savings in resources in quantum experiments.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2101.04634,
title = {Quantum Algorithmic Measurement},
author = {Dorit Aharonov and Jordan Cotler and Xiao-Liang Qi},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2101.04634},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
77+19 pages, 11 figures; v2: improved introduction, typos fixed, references added