Search range in experimental quantum annealing
Nicholas Chancellor, Viv Kendon

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how engineered energy landscapes and noise levels in quantum annealers influence their ability to search for solutions, highlighting the potential for broad and efficient solution space exploration.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel experimental technique to probe the search range of quantum annealers and shows how noise reduction enhances their ability to find distant solutions.
Findings
Lower noise devices are more likely to find distant minima.
Engineered landscapes enable local search in the presence of false minima.
Reducing noise improves the search range of flux qubit quantum annealers.
Abstract
We construct an Ising Hamiltonian with an engineered energy landscape such that it has a local energy minimum which is near to the true global minimum solution, and further away from a false minimum. Using a technique established in previous experiments, we design our experiment such that (at least on timescales relevant to our study) the false minimum is reached preferentially in forward annealing due to high levels of quantum fluctuations. This allows us to demonstrate the key principle of reverse annealing, that the solution space can be searched locally, preferentially finding nearby solutions, even in the presence of a false minimum. The techniques used here are, to the best of our knowledge, distinct from previously used experimental techniques, and allow us to probe the fundamental search range of the device in a way which has not been previously explored. We perform these…
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