Provably accurate simulation of gauge theories and bosonic systems
Yu Tong, Victor V. Albert, Jarrod R. McClean, John Preskill, Yuan Su

TL;DR
This paper develops methods to bound truncation errors in simulating gauge theories and bosonic systems, enabling efficient and provably accurate classical and quantum simulations of complex quantum many-body models.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to bounding local quantum number growth, improving truncation bounds, and providing quantum algorithms with near-linear and near-quadratic complexity for simulating these systems.
Findings
Truncation error scales polylogarithmically with inverse accuracy.
Numerical bounds for the Hubbard-Holstein model show significant improvements.
Quantum algorithms with near-linear and near-quadratic complexity are proposed.
Abstract
Quantum many-body systems involving bosonic modes or gauge fields have infinite-dimensional local Hilbert spaces which must be truncated to perform simulations of real-time dynamics on classical or quantum computers. To analyze the truncation error, we develop methods for bounding the rate of growth of local quantum numbers such as the occupation number of a mode at a lattice site, or the electric field at a lattice link. Our approach applies to various models of bosons interacting with spins or fermions, and also to both abelian and non-abelian gauge theories. We show that if states in these models are truncated by imposing an upper limit on each local quantum number, and if the initial state has low local quantum numbers, then an error at most can be achieved by choosing to scale polylogarithmically with , an exponential improvement over…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum many-body systems · Quantum Information and Cryptography
