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Performance of Grover-QAOA on 3-SAT: Quadratic Speedup, Fair-Sampling, and Parameter Clustering

ORAL

Abstract

The SAT problem stands as a quintessential NP-complete challenge with profound significance across various scientific and engineering disciplines; as such, it has long served as an essential benchmark for classical and quantum algorithms. This study reports numerical evidence for a quadratic speedup of the Grover Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm (G-QAOA) over brute-force searching for finding all solutions to 3-SAT problems. G-QAOA presents a reduction in resource demands and heightened adaptability for tackling 3-SAT challenges compared to Grover's algorithm, alongside its superior capacity for solution sampling over the conventional QAOA. This study elucidates these advantages through classical simulations of many-round G-QAOA on thousands of random 3-SAT instances. We also observe G-QAOA advantages on the IonQ Aria quantum computer for small instances, finding that current hardware suffices to determine and sample all solutions. A noteworthy finding is that imposing a single-angle pair constraint markedly reduces the classical computational overhead of optimizing G-QAOA angles, without detracting from its quadratic performance enhancement, and presents a clustering phenomenon of the angles. The single-angle pair constraints and parameter clustering significantly reduce obstacles to classical optimization of the G-QAOA angles, offering opportunities to solve problems beyond SAT.

Presenters

  • Zewen Zhang

    Rice Univ

Authors

  • Zewen Zhang

    Rice Univ

  • Roger Paredes

    Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Rice University

  • Bhuvanesh Sundar

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University

  • David Quiroga

    Department of Computer Science, Rice University

  • Anastasios Kyrillidis

    Department of Computer Science, Rice University

  • Leonardo Duenas-Osorio

    Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Rice University

  • Guido Pagano

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University, Houston, Texas, U.S.A, Smalley-Curl Institute, Rice University, Houston, Texas, U.S.A, Rice University, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University, U.S.A. ; Smalley-Curl Institute, Rice University, U.S.A., Physics and astronomy, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA; Smalley-Curl Institute, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA, Rice University; Smalley-Curl Institute

  • Kaden R Hazzard

    Rice