When Diabatic Trumps Adiabatic in Quantum Optimization
Abstract
We provide and analyze examples that counter the widely made claim that tunneling is needed for a quantum speedup in optimization problems. The examples belong to the class of perturbed Hamming-weight optimization problems. In one case, featuring a plateau in the cost function in Hamming weight space, we find that the adiabatic dynamics that make tunneling possible, while superior to simulated annealing, result in a slowdown compared to a diabatic cascade of avoided level-crossings. This, in turn, inspires a classical spin vector dynamics algorithm that is at least as efficient for the plateau problem as the diabatic quantum algorithm. In a second case whose cost function is convex in Hamming weight space, the diabatic cascade results in a speedup relative to both tunneling and classical spin vector dynamics.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1505.01249,
title = {When Diabatic Trumps Adiabatic in Quantum Optimization},
author = {Siddharth Muthukrishnan and Tameem Albash and Daniel A. Lidar},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1505.01249},
year = {2016}
}
Comments
16 pages, 8 figures