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How the High-energy Part of the Spectrum Affects the Adiabatic Computation Gap

Published 6 Jun 2019 in math-ph, math.MP, and quant-ph | (1906.02581v1)

Abstract: Towards better understanding of how to design efficient adiabatic quantum algorithms, we study how the adiabatic gap depends on the spectra of the initial and final Hamiltonians in a natural family of test-bed examples. We show that perhaps counter-intuitively, changing the energy in the initial and final Hamiltonians of only highly excited states (we do this by assigning all eigenstates above a certain cutoff the same value), can turn the adiabatic algorithm from being successful to failing. Interestingly, our system exhibits a phase transition; when the cutoff in the spectrum becomes smaller than roughly $n/2$, $n$ being the number of qubits, the behavior transitions from a successful adiabatic process to a failed one. To analyze this behavior, and provide an upper bound on both the minimal gap as well as the success of the adiabatic algorithm, we introduce the notion of "escape rate", which quantifies the rate by which the system escapes the initial ground state (a related notion was also used by Ilin and Lychkovskiy in arXiv:1805.04083). Our results indicate a phenomenon that is interesting on its own right: an adiabatic evolution may be robust to bounded-rank perturbations, even when the latter closes the gap or makes it exponentially small.

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