Pushing the boundaries of Matrix Product States in quantum many-body physics
and computing
Lami, Guglielmo
2023-12-18
Abstract
The Thesis explores the application of Matrix Product States (MPS) in the
domain of quantum many-body systems and quantum computing, show casing the versatility and effectiveness of MPS for addressing complex com putational challenges. The opening chapter introduces essential tools for
Tensor Networks, addressing the curse of dimensionality and elucidating
the main characteristics of Matrix Product States and Matrix Product Op erators. The discussion encompasses also important numerical techniques,
including Density Matrix Renormalization Group and Time Evolving Block
Decimation. Furthermore, the relation between MPS and quantum circuits
is discussed. The subsequent Chapters delve into specific applications of
MPS. In the second Chapter, we introduce a Tensor Network ansatz inspired
by the backflow transformation for correlated systems. This extension of
the MPS representation ensures an area law for entanglement in dimensions
one or greater. We employ an optimization scheme combining DMRG and
variational Monte Carlo algorithms for efficient ground-state search. Bench marking against spin models demonstrates high accuracy. The third Chapter
explores quantum annealing for optimizing complex classical spin Hamil tonians, as the Hopfield model and the binary perceptron. We introduce
an efficient Tensor Network representation for the adiabatic time evolution
of quantum annealing, enabling scalable classical simulations. The use of
MPS in mitigating Trotter errors and mapping to quantum circuits is also
explored. In the fourth Chapter we present a novel method for evaluating
the amount of nonstabilizerness (also known as quantum magic) contained
in an MPS. We overcome the exponentially hard evaluation of this quan tity by employing a simple perfect sampling technique of Pauli string. Our
innovative MPS approach enables efficient computation. Benchmarked on
magic states and the quantum Ising chain ground state, this method offers
easy access to the non-equilibrium dynamics of nonstabilizerness following
a quantum quench. The Appendices provide additional insights, including:
an introduction to variational Monte Carlo, technical details on MPS simula tions for the quantum annealing and a comprehensive overview on stabilizer
formalism and nonstabilizerness.