Adiabatic approximation with exponential accuracy for many-body systems and quantum computation
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3583606
DOI10.1063/1.3236685zbMath1283.81035arXiv0808.2697MaRDI QIDQ3583606
Daniel A. Lidar, Ali T. Rezakhani, Alioscia Hamma
Publication date: 17 August 2010
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0808.2697
81P68: Quantum computation
81V70: Many-body theory; quantum Hall effect
81Q70: Differential geometric methods, including holonomy, Berry and Hannay phases, Aharonov-Bohm effect, etc. in quantum theory
81Q93: Quantum control
Related Items
ON THE GAP OF HAMILTONIANS FOR THE ADIABATIC SIMULATION OF QUANTUM CIRCUITS, Performance of two different quantum annealing correction codes, Differential topology of adiabatically controlled quantum processes, Adiabatic evolution under quantum control, Analysis of adiabatic approximation using stable Hamiltonian method, Quantum adiabatic machine learning, On the efficiency of Hamiltonian-based quantum computation for low-rank matrices, A note on the switching adiabatic theorem
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Adiabatic invariance to all orders
- Adiabatic theorem and spectral concentration. I: Arbitrary order spectral concentration for the Stark effect in atomic physics
- Adiabatic theorem without a gap condition
- Adiabatic perturbation theory in quantum dynamics
- Linear adiabatic theory. Exponential estimates
- Adiabatic expansions near eigenvalue crossings
- Improved gap estimates for simulating quantum circuits by adiabatic evolution
- General adiabatic evolution with a gap condition
- Quantum Phase Transitions
- A Quantum Adiabatic Evolution Algorithm Applied to Random Instances of an NP-Complete Problem
- Noise resistance of adiabatic quantum computation using random matrix theory
- Degree of approximate validity of the adiabatic invariance in quantum mechanics
- Bounds for the adiabatic approximation with applications to quantum computation
- Adiabatic Quantum Computation Is Equivalent to Standard Quantum Computation
- Distance bounds on quantum dynamics
- The Complexity of the Local Hamiltonian Problem
- Elementary exponential error estimates for the adiabatic approximation.