Quantum Hamiltonian complexity and the detectability lemma
Abstract
Quantum Hamiltonian complexity studies computational complexity aspects of local Hamiltonians and ground states; these questions can be viewed as generalizations of classical computational complexity problems related to local constraint satisfaction (such as SAT), with the additional ingredient of multi-particle entanglement. This additional ingredient of course makes generalizations of celebrated theorems such as the PCP theorem from classical to the quantum domain highly non-trivial; it also raises entirely new questions such as bounds on entanglement and correlations in ground states, and in particular area laws. We propose a simple combinatorial tool that helps to handle such questions: it is a simplified, yet more general version of the detectability lemma introduced by us in the more restricted context on quantum gap amplification a year ago. Here, we argue that this lemma is applicable in much more general contexts. We use it to provide a simplified and more combinatorial proof of Hastings' 1D area law, together with a less than 1 page proof of the decay of correlations in gapped local Hamiltonian systems in any constant dimension. We explain how the detectability lemma can replace the Lieb-Robinson bound in various other contexts, and argue that it constitutes a basic tool for the study of local Hamiltonians and their ground states in relation to various questions in quantum Hamiltonian complexity.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1011.3445,
title = {Quantum Hamiltonian complexity and the detectability lemma},
author = {Dorit Aharonov and Itai Arad and Zeph Landau and Umesh Vazirani},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1011.3445},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
23 pages, 5 figures. Minor corrections to Lemmas 5.3 and 5.4, and a small modification to the statement of the Detectability Lemma