Testing matrix product states
Mehdi Soleimanifar, John Wright

TL;DR
This paper develops efficient methods for testing whether quantum states are matrix product states of a given bond dimension, providing optimal bounds for product states and establishing necessary copy complexity for general MPS.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified analysis of the product test and provides an efficient testing algorithm for MPS with bond dimension r, along with a lower bound on the number of copies needed.
Findings
Optimal bounds for the product test analysis.
An efficient algorithm for testing MPS of bond dimension r.
A lower bound of Ω(n^{1/2}) copies necessary for testing MPS.
Abstract
Devising schemes for testing the amount of entanglement in quantum systems has played a crucial role in quantum computing and information theory. Here, we study the problem of testing whether an unknown state is a matrix product state (MPS) in the property testing model. MPS are a class of physically-relevant quantum states which arise in the study of quantum many-body systems. A quantum state comprised of qudits is said to be an MPS of bond dimension if the reduced density matrix has rank for each . When , this corresponds to the set of product states. For larger values of , this yields a more expressive class of quantum states, which are allowed to possess limited amounts of entanglement. In the property testing model, one is given identical copies of , and the goal is to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum many-body systems
