4.6 Article

The Power of Quantum Systems on a Line

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS IN MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS
Volume 287, Issue 1, Pages 41-65

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00220-008-0710-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation [039-7549]
  2. Binational Science Foundation [037-8404]
  3. US Army Research Office [030-7790]
  4. CIFAR
  5. Government of Canada through NSERC
  6. Province of Ontario through MRI
  7. NSF [CCR-0514082]
  8. IST [015848]
  9. ANR AlgoQP grant of the French Research Ministry
  10. Alon Fellowship of the Israeli Higher Council of Academic Research
  11. European Research Council (ERC)

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We study the computational strength of quantum particles (each of finite dimensionality) arranged on a line. First, we prove that it is possible to perform universal adiabatic quantum computation using a one-dimensional quantum system (with 9 states per particle). This might have practical implications for experimentalists interested in constructing an adiabatic quantum computer. Building on the same construction, but with some additional technical effort and 12 states per particle, we show that the problem of approximating the ground state energy of a system composed of a line of quantum particles is QMA-complete; QMA is a quantum analogue of NP. This is in striking contrast to the fact that the analogous classical problem, namely, one-dimensional MAX-2-SAT with nearest neighbor constraints, is in P. The proof of the QMA-completeness result requires an additional idea beyond the usual techniques in the area: Not all illegal configurations can be ruled out by local checks, so instead we rule out such illegal configurations because they would, in the future, evolve into a state which can be seen locally to be illegal. Our construction implies (assuming the quantum Church-Turing thesis and that quantum computers cannot efficiently solve QMA-complete problems) that there are one-dimensional systems which take an exponential time to relax to their ground states at any temperature, making them candidates for being one-dimensional spin glasses.

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