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Variational Generation of Thermofield Double States and Critical Ground States with a Quantum Computer

ORAL

Abstract

Finite-temperature phases of many-body quantum systems are fundamental to phenomena ranging from condensed-matter physics to cosmology, yet they are generally difficult to simulate. Using an ion trap quantum computer and protocols motivated by the Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm (QAOA), we generate nontrivial thermal quantum states of the transversefield Ising model (TFIM) by preparing thermofield double states at a variety of temperatures. We also prepare the critical state of the TFIM at zero temperature using quantum-classical hybrid optimization. The entanglement structure of thermofield double and critical states plays a key role in the study of black holes, and our work simulates such nontrivial structures on a quantum computer. Moreover, we find that the variational quantum circuits exhibit noise thresholds above which the lowest depth QAOA circuits provide the best results.

Presenters

  • Anne Matsuura

    Intel Corp - Santa Clara, Intel Labs, Intel Corporation

Authors

  • Anne Matsuura

    Intel Corp - Santa Clara, Intel Labs, Intel Corporation

  • Sonika Johri

    Intel Labs, Intel Corporation, Intel Corp - Santa Clara

  • Daiwei Zhu

    University of Maryland, College Park, Physics, University of Maryland, University of Maryland, Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, Department of Physics & Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, College Park

  • Norbert M Linke

    Physics, University of Maryland, University of Maryland

  • kevin landsman

    Physics, University of Maryland, University of Maryland

  • Nhung Nguyen

    Physics, University of Maryland, University of Maryland

  • Cinthia Alderete

    Physics, University of Maryland, University of Maryland

  • Timothy Hsieh

    Perimeter Inst for Theo Phys, Perimeter Institute, Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

  • Christopher Roy Monroe

    University of Maryland, College Park, University of Maryland Department of Physics and NIST, Physics, University of Maryland, University of Maryland, Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, Department of Physics & Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, College Park