Large-scale stochastic simulation of open quantum systems
Aaron Sander, Maximilian Fr\"ohlich, Martin Eigel, Jens Eisert, Patrick Gel{\ss}, Michael Hinterm\"uller, Richard M. Milbradt, Robert Wille, Christian B. Mendl

TL;DR
This paper introduces the tensor jump method (TJM), a scalable and parallel algorithm for simulating large open quantum systems with Lindbladian dynamics, enabling simulations of systems with up to a thousand spins on standard hardware.
Contribution
The paper extends the Monte Carlo wave function method to matrix product states and introduces a sampling MPS, significantly improving scalability and accuracy in simulating open quantum systems.
Findings
Scales more effectively than previous methods
Ensures convergence independent of system size
Simulates up to a thousand spins on a CPU
Abstract
Understanding the precise interaction mechanisms between quantum systems and their environment is crucial for advancing stable quantum technologies, designing reliable experimental frameworks, and building accurate models of real-world phenomena. However, simulating open quantum systems, which feature complex non-unitary dynamics, poses significant computational challenges that require innovative methods to overcome. In this work, we introduce the tensor jump method (TJM), a scalable, embarrassingly parallel algorithm for stochastically simulating large-scale open quantum systems, specifically Markovian dynamics captured by Lindbladians. This method is built on three core principles where, in particular, we extend the Monte Carlo wave function (MCWF) method to matrix product states, use a dynamic time-dependent variational principle (TDVP) to significantly reduce errors during time…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum many-body systems
