Steered quantum annealing: improving time efficiency with partial information
ORAL
Abstract
In the computational model of quantum annealing, the size of the minimum gap between the ground state and the first excited state of the system is of particular importance, since it is inversely proportional to the running time of the algorithm. Thus, it is desirable to keep the gap as large as possible during the annealing process, since it allows the computation to remain under the protection of the adiabatic theorem while staying efficient. We propose steered quantum annealing as a new method to enlarge the gap throughout the process, in the case of diagonal final Hamiltonians, based on the exploitation of some assumptions we can make about the particular problem instance. In order to introduce this information, we propose beginning the anneal from a biased Hamiltonian that incorporates reliable assumptions about the final ground state. Our simulations show that this method yields a larger average gap throughout the whole computation, which further highlights the increase in robustness of the latter.
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Publication: Ana Palacios de Luis, Artur Garcia-Saez and Marta P. Estarellas. Steered quantum annealing: improving time efficiency with partial information, to be submitted.
Presenters
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Ana Palacios
Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech
Authors
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Ana Palacios
Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech
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Marta P Estarellas
Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech
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Artur Garcia-Saez
Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech, Barcelona Supercomputing Center, Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech, BSC, Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech