Computational Role of Collective Tunneling in a Quantum Annealer
Sergio Boixo, Vadim N. Smelyanskiy, Alireza Shabani, Sergei, V. Isakov, Mark Dykman, Vasil S. Denchev, Mohammad Amin, Anatoly, Smirnov, Masoud Mohseni, Hartmut Neven

TL;DR
This paper provides experimental evidence and a theoretical model demonstrating that multiqubit quantum tunneling plays a significant computational role in quantum annealing, improving optimization success rates.
Contribution
First experimental demonstration of multiqubit tunneling's computational role in a quantum annealer, supported by a NIBA Quantum Master Equation model.
Findings
Quantum tunneling enables escape from false minima in optimization.
Success probability increases with multiqubit tunneling, especially in larger problems.
Temperature dependence of success probability differs from classical thermal hopping.
Abstract
Quantum tunneling is a phenomenon in which a quantum state traverses energy barriers above the energy of the state itself. Tunneling has been hypothesized as an advantageous physical resource for optimization. Here we present the first experimental evidence of a computational role of multiqubit quantum tunneling in the evolution of a programmable quantum annealer. We develop a theoretical model based on a NIBA Quantum Master Equation to describe the multiqubit dissipative tunneling effects under the complex noise characteristics of such quantum devices. We start by considering a computational primitive, an optimization problem consisting of just one global and one false minimum. The quantum evolutions enable tunneling to the global minimum while the corresponding classical paths are trapped in a false minimum. In our study the non-convex potentials are realized by frustrated networks of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Neural Networks and Reservoir Computing
