English

Warm Start Adaptive-Bias Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm

Quantum Physics 2025-07-25 v1

Abstract

In the search for quantum advantage in real--world problems, one promising avenue is to use a quantum algorithm to improve on the solution found using an efficient classical algorithm. The quantum approximate optimization algorithm (QAOA) is particularly well adapted for such a "warm start" approach, and can be combined with the powerful classical Goemans-Williamson (GW) algorithms based on semi-definite programming. Nonetheless, the best way to leverage the power of the QAOA remains an open question. Here we propose a general model that describes a class of QAOA variants, and use it to explore routes to quantum advantages in a canonical optimization problem, MaxCut. For these algorithms we derive analytic expectation values of the cost Hamiltonian for the MaxCut problem in the level-1 case. Using these analytic results we obtain reliable averages over many instances for fairly large numbers of qubits. We find that the warm start adaptive-bias QAOA (WS-ab-QAOA) initialized by the GW algorithm outperforms previously proposed warm start variants on problems with 4040 to 180180 qubits. To assess whether a quantum advantage exists with this algorithm, we did numerical simulations with up to 10001000 qubits to see whether the level-1 WS-ab-QAOA can improve the GW solution for 3-regular graphs. In fact the improvement in the 10001000-qubit case even in level 1 can only be matched by the GW algorithm after about 105.510^{5.5} random projections performed after the semi-definite program stage. This work gives evidence that the final stage of optimization after an efficient classical algorithm has produced an approximate solution may be a place where quantum advantages can be realized.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2503.20048,
  title  = {Warm Start Adaptive-Bias Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm},
  author = {Yunlong Yu and Xiang-Bin Wang and Nic Shannon and Robert Joynt},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.20048},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

17 pages, 7 figures