Learning quantum many-body systems from a few copies

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Learning quantum many-body systems from a few copies. / Rouzé, Cambyse; França, Daniel Stilck.

In: Quantum, Vol. 8, 1319, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rouzé, C & França, DS 2024, 'Learning quantum many-body systems from a few copies', Quantum, vol. 8, 1319. https://doi.org/10.22331/q-2024-04-30-1319

APA

Rouzé, C., & França, D. S. (2024). Learning quantum many-body systems from a few copies. Quantum, 8, [1319]. https://doi.org/10.22331/q-2024-04-30-1319

Vancouver

Rouzé C, França DS. Learning quantum many-body systems from a few copies. Quantum. 2024;8. 1319. https://doi.org/10.22331/q-2024-04-30-1319

Author

Rouzé, Cambyse ; França, Daniel Stilck. / Learning quantum many-body systems from a few copies. In: Quantum. 2024 ; Vol. 8.

Bibtex

@article{dd1d9d9799bb4407bda1856ca2bbd196,
title = "Learning quantum many-body systems from a few copies",
abstract = "Estimating physical properties of quantum states from measurements is one of the most fundamental tasks in quantum science. In this work, we identify conditions on states under which it is possible to infer the expectation values of all quasi-local observables of a state from a number of copies that scale polylogarithmically with the system{\textquoteright}s size and polynomially on the locality of the target observables. We show that this constitutes a provable exponential improvement in the number of copies over state-of-the-art tomography protocols. We achieve our results by combining the maximum entropy method with tools from the emerging fields of classical shadows and quantum optimal transport. The latter allows us to fine-tune the error made in estimating the expectation value of an observable in terms of how local it is and how well we approximate the expectation value of a fixed set of few-body observables. We conjecture that our condition holds for all states exhibiting some form of decay of correlations and establish it for several subsets thereof. These include widely studied classes of states such as one-dimensional thermal and high-temperature Gibbs states of local commuting Hamiltonians on arbitrary hypergraphs or outputs of shallow circuits. Moreover, we show improvements of the maximum entropy method beyond the sample complexity that are of independent interest. These include identifying regimes in which it is possible to perform the postprocessing efficiently as well as novel bounds on the condition number of covariance matrices of many-body states.",
author = "Cambyse Rouz{\'e} and Fran{\c c}a, {Daniel Stilck}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 Verein zur Forderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften. All rights reserved.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.22331/q-2024-04-30-1319",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "Quantum",
issn = "2521-327X",
publisher = "Verein zur F{\"o}rderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Learning quantum many-body systems from a few copies

AU - Rouzé, Cambyse

AU - França, Daniel Stilck

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 Verein zur Forderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften. All rights reserved.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Estimating physical properties of quantum states from measurements is one of the most fundamental tasks in quantum science. In this work, we identify conditions on states under which it is possible to infer the expectation values of all quasi-local observables of a state from a number of copies that scale polylogarithmically with the system’s size and polynomially on the locality of the target observables. We show that this constitutes a provable exponential improvement in the number of copies over state-of-the-art tomography protocols. We achieve our results by combining the maximum entropy method with tools from the emerging fields of classical shadows and quantum optimal transport. The latter allows us to fine-tune the error made in estimating the expectation value of an observable in terms of how local it is and how well we approximate the expectation value of a fixed set of few-body observables. We conjecture that our condition holds for all states exhibiting some form of decay of correlations and establish it for several subsets thereof. These include widely studied classes of states such as one-dimensional thermal and high-temperature Gibbs states of local commuting Hamiltonians on arbitrary hypergraphs or outputs of shallow circuits. Moreover, we show improvements of the maximum entropy method beyond the sample complexity that are of independent interest. These include identifying regimes in which it is possible to perform the postprocessing efficiently as well as novel bounds on the condition number of covariance matrices of many-body states.

AB - Estimating physical properties of quantum states from measurements is one of the most fundamental tasks in quantum science. In this work, we identify conditions on states under which it is possible to infer the expectation values of all quasi-local observables of a state from a number of copies that scale polylogarithmically with the system’s size and polynomially on the locality of the target observables. We show that this constitutes a provable exponential improvement in the number of copies over state-of-the-art tomography protocols. We achieve our results by combining the maximum entropy method with tools from the emerging fields of classical shadows and quantum optimal transport. The latter allows us to fine-tune the error made in estimating the expectation value of an observable in terms of how local it is and how well we approximate the expectation value of a fixed set of few-body observables. We conjecture that our condition holds for all states exhibiting some form of decay of correlations and establish it for several subsets thereof. These include widely studied classes of states such as one-dimensional thermal and high-temperature Gibbs states of local commuting Hamiltonians on arbitrary hypergraphs or outputs of shallow circuits. Moreover, we show improvements of the maximum entropy method beyond the sample complexity that are of independent interest. These include identifying regimes in which it is possible to perform the postprocessing efficiently as well as novel bounds on the condition number of covariance matrices of many-body states.

U2 - 10.22331/q-2024-04-30-1319

DO - 10.22331/q-2024-04-30-1319

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85192862859

VL - 8

JO - Quantum

JF - Quantum

SN - 2521-327X

M1 - 1319

ER -

ID: 393273369