A measurement-driven quantum algorithm for SAT: Performance guarantees via spectral gaps and measurement parallelization
Franz J. Schreiber, Maximilian J. Kramer, Alexander Nietner, Jens Eisert

TL;DR
This paper introduces a measurement-driven quantum algorithm for SAT that offers performance guarantees based on spectral gaps and measurement parallelization, surpassing traditional Grover-based methods and achieving polynomial runtime on certain instances.
Contribution
It presents a new quantum SAT solver with a spectral gap-based runtime analysis, measurement parallelization, and practical improvements for specific SAT instances.
Findings
Runtime depends on spectral gap and measurement success probability.
Algorithm achieves polynomial runtime on certain SAT instances.
Introduces measurement parallelization and amplitude amplification techniques.
Abstract
The Boolean satisfiability problem (SAT) is of central importance in both theory and practice. Yet, most provable guarantees for quantum algorithms rely exclusively on Grover-type methods that cap the possible advantage at only quadratic speed-ups, making the search for approaches that surpass this quadratic barrier a key challenge. In this light, this work presents a rigorous worst-case runtime analysis of a recently introduced measurement-driven quantum SAT solver. Importantly, this quantum algorithm does not exclusively rely on Grover-type methods and shows promising numerical performance. Our analysis establishes that the algorithm's runtime depends on an exponential trade-off between two key properties: the spectral gap of the associated Hamiltonian and the success probability of the driving measurements. We show that this trade-off can be systematically controlled by a tunable…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Constraint Satisfaction and Optimization · Formal Methods in Verification
