Bulletin of the American Physical Society
90th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Section of the APS
Thursday–Saturday, November 9–11, 2023; Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, Kentucky
Session C01: Quantum Information and Computing
2:00 PM–2:54 PM,
Thursday, November 9, 2023
Keen Johnson
Room: South Room
Chair: Himal Acharya, University of Kentucky
Abstract: C01.00001 : Subspace diagonalization using Eigenvector continuation*
2:00 PM–2:30 PM
Presenter:
Anjali Agrawal
(North Carolina State University)
Authors:
Anjali Agrawal
(North Carolina State University)
Akhil Francis
(North Carolina State University)
Alexander F Kemper
(North Carolina State University)
Quantum subspace diagonalization (QSD) methods are quantum-classical hybrid methods, commonly used to find ground and excited state energies by projecting the Hamiltonian to a smaller subspace. In applying these, the choice of subspace basis is critical from the perspectives of basis completeness and efficiency of implementation on quantum computers. In this work, we present Eigenvector Continuation (EC) as a QSD method, where low-energy states of the Hamiltonian at different points in parameter space are chosen as the subspace basis. This unique choice enables rapid evaluation of low-energy spectra, including ground and nearby excited states, with minimal hardware effort. As a particular advantage, EC is able to capture the spectrum across ground state crossovers corresponding to different symmetry sectors of the problem. We will use different methods to get low energy states at those few points to make subspace including exact diagonalization, adiabatic time evolution ATE and imaginary time evolution. In doing so we will see how scanty evolutions can be beneficial and can reduce computational costs. We demonstrate this method for interacting spin models and molecules. As effects of noise play a significant part in today’s quantum era, we investigate the algorithm in presence of and changing noise.
*This work is funded by DARPA.
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