English

Quantum Metropolis Sampling

Quantum Physics 2015-03-13 v2 Strongly Correlated Electrons High Energy Physics - Lattice

Abstract

The original motivation to build a quantum computer came from Feynman who envisaged a machine capable of simulating generic quantum mechanical systems, a task that is believed to be intractable for classical computers. Such a machine would have a wide range of applications in the simulation of many-body quantum physics, including condensed matter physics, chemistry, and high energy physics. Part of Feynman's challenge was met by Lloyd who showed how to approximately decompose the time-evolution operator of interacting quantum particles into a short sequence of elementary gates, suitable for operation on a quantum computer. However, this left open the problem of how to simulate the equilibrium and static properties of quantum systems. This requires the preparation of ground and Gibbs states on a quantum computer. For classical systems, this problem is solved by the ubiquitous Metropolis algorithm, a method that basically acquired a monopoly for the simulation of interacting particles. Here, we demonstrate how to implement a quantum version of the Metropolis algorithm on a quantum computer. This algorithm permits to sample directly from the eigenstates of the Hamiltonian and thus evades the sign problem present in classical simulations. A small scale implementation of this algorithm can already be achieved with today's technology

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0911.3635,
  title  = {Quantum Metropolis Sampling},
  author = {K. Temme and T. J. Osborne and K. G. Vollbrecht and D. Poulin and F. Verstraete},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0911.3635},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

revised version

R2 v1 2026-06-21T14:13:23.904Z