Quadratic speedup for spatial search by continuous-time quantum walk

Ғылым және технология

CQT Online Talks - Series: Computer Science Seminars
Speaker: Leonardo Novo, Ecole polytechnique de Bruxelles
Abstract: Continuous-time quantum walks provide a natural framework to tackle the fundamental problem of finding a node among a set of marked nodes in a graph, known as spatial search. Whether spatial search by continuous-time quantum walk provides a quadratic advantage over classical random walks has been an outstanding problem. Thus far, this advantage is obtained only for specific graphs or when a single node of the underlying graph is marked. In this article, we provide a new continuous-time quantum walk search algorithm that completely resolves this: our algorithm can find a marked node in any graph with any number of marked nodes, in a time that is quadratically faster than classical random walks. The overall algorithm is quite simple, requiring time evolution of the quantum walk Hamiltonian followed by a projective measurement. A key component of our algorithm is a purely analog procedure to perform operations on a state of the form e^{−tH^2}|ψ⟩, for a given Hamiltonian H: it only requires evolving H for time scaling as \sqrt{t}. This allows us to quadratically fast-forward the dynamics of a continuous-time classical random walk. The applications of our work thus go beyond the realm of quantum walks and can lead to new analog quantum algorithms for preparing ground states of Hamiltonians or solving optimization problems.

Пікірлер: 2

  • @stervi2
    @stervi2 Жыл бұрын

    What is the benefit of using this algorithm to find something if you have to encode the thing you’re looking for in the Hamiltonian before you start? It feels very circular as you’ve already got possession of the state you’re looking for

  • @aua-mw9pm

    @aua-mw9pm

    Жыл бұрын

    about hamiltonians in general: a hamiltonian represents "constraints", and some highly relevant problems (for example, the ground state for the ising model) have hamiltonians that are k-local but with no known classical solutions

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