1 / 24

A Monomial matrix formalism to describe quantum many-body states

A Monomial matrix formalism to describe quantum many-body states. Maarten Van den Nest Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics. arXiv:1108.0531. Montreal, October 19 th 2011. Motivation Generalizing the Pauli stabilizer formalism. The Pauli stabilizer formalism (PSF).

ova
Télécharger la présentation

A Monomial matrix formalism to describe quantum many-body states

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Monomial matrix formalism to describe quantum many-body states Maarten Van den Nest Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics arXiv:1108.0531 Montreal, October 19th 2011

  2. MotivationGeneralizing the Pauli stabilizer formalism

  3. The Pauli stabilizer formalism (PSF) • The PSF describes joint eigenspaces of sets of commuting Pauli operators i: i| = | i = 1, …, k • Encompasses important many-body states/spaces: cluster states, GHZ states, toric code, … • E.g. 1D cluster state:i = Zi-1 Xi Zi+1 • The PSF is used in virtually allsubfields of QIT: • Quantum error-correction, one-way QC, classical simulations, entanglement purification, information-theoretic protocols, …

  4. Aim of this work • Why is PSF so successful? • Stabilizer picture offers efficient description • Interestingquantities can be efficiently computedfrom this description (e.g. local observables, entanglement entropy, …) • More generally: understand properties of states by manipulating their stabilizers • What are disadvantages of PSF? • Small class of states • Special properties: entanglement maximal or zero, cannot occur as unique ground states of two-local hamiltonians, commuting stabilizers, (often) zero correlation length… • Aim of this work: Generalize PSF by using larger class of stabilizer operators + keep pros and get rid of cons….

  5. Outline I. Monomial stabilizers: definitions + examples II. Main characterizations III. Computational complexity & efficiency IV. Outlook and conclusions

  6. I. Monomial stabilizersDefinitions + examples

  7. M-states/spaces • Observation:Pauli operators are monomial unitarymatrices • Precisely one nonzero entry per row/column • Nonzero entries are complex phases • M-state/space: arbitrary monomial unitary stabilizer operators Ui Ui| = | i = 1, …, m • Restrict toUiwith efficiently computable matrix elements • E.g. k-local, poly-size quantum circuit of monomial operators, …

  8. Examples • M-states/spaces encompass many importantstate families: • All stabilizer states and codes (also for qudits) • AKLT model • Kitaev’s abelian + nonabelian quantum doubles • W-states • Dicke states • Coherent probabilistic computations • LME states (locally maximally entanglable) • Coset states of abelian groups • …

  9. Example: AKLT model • 1D chain of spin-1 particles (open or periodic boundary conditions) • H = I-Hi,i+1 where Hi,i+1 is projector on subspace spanned by • Ground level = zero energy: all |ψ withHi,i+1 |ψ = |ψ • Considermonomial unitary U: • Ground level = all |ψ withUi,i+1 |ψ = |ψ and thus M-space

  10. II. Main characterizationsHow are properties of state/space reflected in properties of stabilizer group? Notation: computational basis |x, |y, …

  11. Two important groups M-space Ui| = | i = 1, …, m • Stabilizer group = (finite) group generated by Ui • Permutation group  • Every monomial unitary matrix can be written as U = PD with P permutation matrix and Ddiagonal matrix. Call U := P • Define  := {U : U }= group generated by Ui • Orbits:Ox= orbit of comp. basis state |x under action of • |y Ox iff there exists U  and phase  s.t. U|x = |y

  12. Characterizing M-states • Consider M-state |ψ and fix arbitrary |x such that ψ|x  0 • Claim 1: All amplitudes are zero outside orbit Ox: • Claim 2:All nonzero amplitudes y|ψ have equal modulus • For all |y Ox there exists U  and phase  s.t. U|x = |y • Then y|ψ =  x|U*|ψ =  x|ψ • Phase  is independent of U:  = x(y)

  13. M-states are uniform superpositions • Fix arbitrary |x such that ψ|x  0 • All amplitudes are zero outside orbit Ox • All nonzero amplitudes have equal modulus with phase x(y) |ψ is uniform superposition over orbit • Recipe to compute x(y): • Find any U  such that s.t. U|x = |y for some ; then  = x(y) • (Almost) complete characterization in terms of stabilizer group

  14. Which orbit is the right one? • For every |x let x be the subgroup of all U which have |xas eigenvector. Then: Oxis the correct orbitiffx|U|x = 1 for all U x • Example: GHZ state with stabilizers Zi Zi+1and X1 …Xn. • Ox = {|x, |x + d} where d = (1, …, 1) • xgenerated by Zi Zi+1for every x • Therefore O0 = {|0, |d} is correct orbit

  15. M-spaces and the orbit basis • Use similar ideas to construct basis of any M-space (orbit basis) B = {|ψ1, … |ψd } • Each basis state is uniform superposition over some orbit • These orbits are disjoint ( dimension bounded by total # of orbits!) • Phases x(y) + “good” orbits can be computed analogous to before Computational basis |ψ1 |ψ2 … |ψd

  16. Example: AKLT model (n even) • Recall: monomial stabilizer for particles i and i+1 • Generators of permutation group: replace +1 by -1 • There are 4 Orbits: • All basis states with even number of |0s, |1s and |2s • All basis states with odd number of |0s and even number of |1s, |2s • All basis states with odd number of |1s and even number of |0s, |2s • All basis states with odd number of |2s and even number of |0s, |1s • Corollary: ground level at most 4-fold degenerate

  17. Example: AKLT model (n even) • Orbit basis for open boundary conditions: • Unique ground state for periodic boundary conditions:

  18. III. Computational complexityand efficiency

  19. NP hardness • Consider an M-state |ψ described in terms of diagonal unitary stabilizers acting on at most 3 qubits. • Problem 1: Compute (estimate) single-qubit reduced density operators (with some constant error) • Problem 2: Classically sample the distribution |x|ψ|2 • Both problems are NP-hard (Proof: reduction to 3SAT) • Under which conditions are efficient classical simulations possible?

  20. Efficient classical simulations • Consider M-state |ψ Then |x|ψ|2can be sampled efficiently classicallyif the following problems have efficient classical solutions: • Find an arbitrary |x such that ψ|x  0 • Generate uniformly random element from the orbit of |x • Additional conditions to ensure that local expectation values can be estimated efficiently classically • Given y, does |x belong to orbit of x? • Given y in the orbit of x, compute x(y) • Note: Simulations via sampling (weak simulations)

  21. Efficient classical simulations • Turns out: this general classical simulation method works for all examples given earlier • Pauli stabilizer states (also for qudits) • AKLT model • Kitaev’s abelian + nonabelian quantum doubles • W-states • Dicke states • LME states (locally maximally entanglable) • Coherent probabilistic computations • Coset states of abelian groups • Yields unified method to simulate a number of state families

  22. IV. Conclusions and outlook

  23. Conclusions & Outlook • Goal of this work was to demonstrate that: (1) M-states/spaces contain relevant state families, well beyond PSF (2) Properties of M-states/-spaces can transparently be understood by manipulating their monomial stabilizer groups (3) NP-hard in general but efficient classical simulations for interesting subclass • Many questions: • Construct new state families that can be treated with MSF • 2D version of AKLT • Connection to MPS/PEPS • Physical meaning of monomiality • …

  24. Thank you!

More Related