English

Efficient thermalization and universal quantum computing with quantum Gibbs samplers

Quantum Physics 2026-04-20 v3 Mathematical Physics math.MP

Abstract

The preparation of thermal states of matter is a crucial task in quantum simulation. In this work, we prove that a recently introduced, efficiently implementable dissipative evolution thermalizes to the Gibbs state in time scaling polynomially with system size at high enough temperatures for any Hamiltonian that satisfies a Lieb-Robinson bound, such as local Hamiltonians on a lattice. Furthermore, we show the efficient adiabatic preparation of the associated purifications or ``thermofield double'' states. These results establish the efficient preparation of high-temperature Gibbs states and their purifications. In the low-temperature regime, we show that implementing this family of dissipative evolutions for inverse temperatures polynomial in the system's size is computationally equivalent to polynomial time quantum computations. On a technical level, for high temperatures, our proof makes use of the mapping of the generator of the evolution into a Hamiltonian, and then connecting its convergence to that of the infinite temperature limit. For low temperature, we instead perform a perturbation at zero temperature and resort to circuit-to-Hamiltonian mappings akin to the proof of universality of quantum adiabatic computing. Taken together, our results show that a family of quasi-local dissipative evolutions efficiently prepares a large class of quantum many-body states of interest, and has the potential to mirror the success of classical Monte Carlo methods for quantum many-body systems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2403.12691,
  title  = {Efficient thermalization and universal quantum computing with quantum Gibbs samplers},
  author = {Cambyse Rouzé and Daniel Stilck França and Álvaro M. Alhambra},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2403.12691},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

39 pages. Close to published version

R2 v1 2026-06-28T15:25:41.234Z