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Published October 15, 2021 | Accepted Version + Published
Journal Article Open

Quantum simulation of cosmic inflation

Abstract

In this paper, we generalize Jordan-Lee-Preskill, an algorithm for simulating flat-space quantum field theories, to 3+1 dimensional inflationary spacetime. The generalized algorithm contains the encoding treatment, the initial state preparation, the inflation process, and the quantum measurement of cosmological observables at late time. The algorithm is helpful for obtaining predictions of cosmic non-Gaussianities, serving as useful benchmark problems for quantum devices, and checking assumptions made about interacting vacuum in the inflationary perturbation theory. Components of our work also include a detailed discussion about the lattice regularization of the cosmic perturbation theory, a detailed discussion about the in-in formalism, a discussion about encoding using the Hamilton-Kabat-Lifschytz-Lowe-type formula that might apply for both dS and AdS spacetimes, a discussion about bounding curvature perturbations, a description of the three-party Trotter simulation algorithm for time-dependent Hamiltonians, a ground state projection algorithm for simulating gapless theories, a discussion about the quantum-extended Church-Turing thesis, and a discussion about simulating cosmic reheating in quantum devices.

Additional Information

© 2021 American Physical Society. (Received 14 October 2020; accepted 30 August 2021; published 5 October 2021) We thank Robert Brandenberger, Alex Buser, Cliff Cheung, Hrant Gharibyan, Masanori Hanada, Jim Hartle, Masazumi Honda, Isaac Kim, Hank Lamm, Ying-Ying Li, Don Marolf, David Meltzer, Ash Milsted, John Preskill, Burak Sahinoglu, Eva Silverstein, David Simmons-Duffin, Yuan Su, Jinzhao Sun, Guifre Vidal, Dong-Gang Wang, Yi Wang, Mark Wise, Zhong-Zhi Xianyu, and Xiao Yuan for discussions related to this paper. J. L. is supported in part by the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter (IQIM), an NSF Physics Frontiers Center (NSF Grant No. PHY-1125565) with support from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (GBMF-2644), and by the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics.

Attached Files

Published - PhysRevD.104.086013.pdf

Accepted Version - 2009.10921.pdf

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August 20, 2023
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