Abstracts

Quantum dynamical complexity and reliability of analog quantum simulation

Presenting Author: Karthik Chinni, University of New Mexico CQuIC
Contributing Author(s): Pablo Poggi, Ivan Deutsch

The NISQ era is characterized by the absence of fully fault-tolerant quantum simulators, which raises a question about the reliability of such devices. To address this, we seek to quantify the reliability of an analog quantum simulator, which doesn’t have access to error correction, in the presence of perturbations that make the dynamics quantum chaotic. In doing so we seek to identify the relationship between the robustness of the quantities that we seek to extract from the simulator and the dynamical complexity of the analog evolution. As one measure, we quantify the complexity by the number of variables that one must track to approximately yield the output within a desired accuracy. We address these questions by studying the basic paradigms such as the ground state and the excited state quantum phase transitions in the Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick (LMG) model[1]. References:[1]Marco Távora, and Francisco Pérez-Bernal. "Excited-state quantum phase transitions in many-body systems with infinite-range interaction: Localization, dynamics, and bifurcation." Physical Review A 94.1 (2016): 012113

(Session 5 : Saturday from 5:00pm - 7:00pm)

 

SQuInT Chief Organizer
Akimasa Miyake, Associate Professor
amiyake@unm.edu

SQuInT Co-Organizer
Brian Smith, Associate Professor UO
bjsmith@uoregon.edu

SQuInT Program Committee
Postdoctoral Fellows:
Markus Allgaier (UO OMQ)
Sayonee Ray (UNM CQuIC)
Pablo Poggi (UNM CQuIC)
Valerian Thiel (UO OMQ)

SQuInT Event Co-Organizers (Oregon)
Jorjie Arden
jarden@uoregon.edu
Holly Lynn
hollylyn@uoregon.edu

SQuInT Event Administrator (Oregon)
Brandy Todd

SQuInT Administrator (CQuIC)
Gloria Cordova
gjcordo1@unm.edu
505 277-1850

SQuInT Founder
Ivan Deutsch, Regents' Professor, CQuIC Director
ideutsch@unm.edu

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