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Digital Heater: Engineering Thermal Distributions on Quantum Computers

ORAL

Abstract

Dynamically generating thermal states of quantum systems is difficult, and requires modeling a macroscopic environment or obtaining detailed knowledge of the system energy spectra. Modeling the macroscopic environment on a quantum simulator may be achieved by coupling ancillary qubits such that each of the transitions in the system spectrum is covered. This approach requires an exponential number of ancillary degrees of freedom which is impractical. We develop a quantum algorithm that uses spectral combing with ancillary qubits that are on average in a thermal state. Our algorithm simulates a large bath while only requiring linear complexity by periodically modulating the ancilla energy over a time period. We evaluate the algorithm by determining error in magnetization of the finite-temperature transverse Ising model.

Presenters

  • Emma Stone

    Department of Physics, North Carolina State University

Authors

  • Mekena Metcalf

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Computational Research Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Emma Stone

    Department of Physics, North Carolina State University

  • Katherine Klymko

    Computational Research Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Alexander F Kemper

    North Carolina State University, Department of Physics, North Carolina State University

  • Mohan Sarovar

    Sandia National Laboratories, Extreme-Scale Data Science and Analytics, Sandia National Laboratories

  • Wibe A De Jong

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Computational Research Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory