Classical algorithms, correlation decay, and complex zeros of partition functions of quantum many-body systems
Abstract
We present a quasi-polynomial time classical algorithm that estimates the partition function of quantum many-body systems at temperatures above the thermal phase transition point. It is known that in the worst case, the same problem is NP-hard below this point. Together with our work, this shows that the transition in the phase of a quantum system is also accompanied by a transition in the hardness of approximation. We also show that in a system of n particles above the phase transition point, the correlation between two observables whose distance is at least Ω(logn) decays exponentially. We can improve the factor of logn to a constant when the Hamiltonian has commuting terms or is on a 1D chain. The key to our results is a characterization of the phase transition and the critical behavior of the system in terms of the complex zeros of the partition function. Our work extends a seminal work of Dobrushin and Shlosman on the equivalence between the decay of correlations and the analyticity of the free energy in classical spin models. On the algorithmic side, our result extends the scope of a recent approach due to Barvinok for solving classical counting problems to quantum many-body systems.
Additional Information
© 2020 Copyright held by the owner/author(s). Publication rights licensed to ACM. We thank Fernando Brandão, Kohtaro Kato, Tomotaka Kuwahara, Zeph Landau, Milad Marvian, and John Wright for helpful discussions. This work was funded by NSF grants CCF-1452616, CCF-1729369, PHY-1818914; ARO contract W911NF-17-1-0433; and a Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology Global Research Partnership. The Institute for Quantum Information and Matter is an NSF Physics Frontiers Center.Attached Files
Published - 3357713.3384322.pdf
Accepted Version - 1910.09071.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 108231
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20210226-083215255
- NSF
- CCF-1452616
- NSF
- CCF-1729369
- NSF
- PHY-1818914
- Army Research Office (ARO)
- W911NF-17-1-0433
- Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology
- Created
-
2021-02-26Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2021-11-16Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Institute for Quantum Information and Matter