Breakdown of the weak coupling limit in quantum annealing
Yuki Bando, Ka-Wa Yip, Huo Chen, Daniel A. Lidar, Hidetoshi, Nishimori

TL;DR
This study investigates reverse quantum annealing on a D-Wave device, revealing asymmetries in success probabilities and demonstrating that strong system-bath coupling models better explain experimental results than weak coupling assumptions.
Contribution
The paper provides experimental data on reverse annealing and compares open-system models, showing the importance of strong coupling effects in quantum annealer dynamics.
Findings
Empirical asymmetry in success probabilities depending on initial states.
Weak coupling models fail to match experimental results.
Strong coupling models align closely with observed data.
Abstract
Reverse annealing is a variant of quantum annealing, in which the system is prepared in a classical state, reverse-annealed to an inversion point, and then forward-annealed. We report on reverse annealing experiments using the D-Wave 2000Q device, with a focus on the -spin problem, which undergoes a second order quantum phase transition with a gap that closes polynomially in the number of spins. We concentrate on the total and partial success probabilities, the latter being the probabilities of finding each of two degenerate ground states of all spins up or all spins down, the former being their sum. The empirical partial success probabilities exhibit a strong asymmetry between the two degenerate ground states, depending on the initial state of the reverse anneal. To explain these results, we perform open-system simulations using master equations in the limits of weak and…
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