Quasiparticle cooling algorithms for quantum many-body state preparation
Jerome Lloyd, Alexios Michailidis, Xiao Mi, Vadim Smelyanskiy, Dmitry, A. Abanin

TL;DR
This paper develops a kinetic theory framework to analyze and optimize quasiparticle cooling algorithms for preparing many-body ground states on near-term quantum processors, demonstrating high-fidelity state preparation across various models.
Contribution
It introduces a time-modulated coupling protocol and validates the kinetic theory with numerical simulations, showing improved efficiency and robustness of quasiparticle cooling methods.
Findings
High-fidelity ground state preparation in multiple quantum models.
Effective quasiparticle removal with time-modulated auxiliary coupling.
Noise limits the maximum achievable fidelity, with thresholds identified.
Abstract
Probing correlated states of many-body systems is one of the central tasks for quantum simulators and processors. A promising approach to state preparation is to realize desired correlated states as steady states of engineered dissipative evolution. A recent experiment with a Google superconducting quantum processor [X. Mi et al., Science 383, 1332 (2024)] demonstrated a cooling algorithm utilizing auxiliary degrees of freedom that are periodically reset to remove quasiparticles from the system, thereby driving it towards its ground state. In this work, we develop a kinetic theory framework to describe quasiparticle cooling dynamics, and employ it to compare the efficiency of different cooling algorithms. In particular, we introduce a protocol where coupling to auxiliaries is modulated in time to minimize heating processes, and demonstrate that it allows a high-fidelity preparation of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies
