PTER removes Trotter errors in quantum Hamiltonian simulation via quasi-probabilistic reversal of the error dynamics, producing unbiased results with constant overhead.
Hamiltonian simulation with nearly optimal dependence on all parameters
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
We present an algorithm for sparse Hamiltonian simulation whose complexity is optimal (up to log factors) as a function of all parameters of interest. Previous algorithms had optimal or near-optimal scaling in some parameters at the cost of poor scaling in others. Hamiltonian simulation via a quantum walk has optimal dependence on the sparsity at the expense of poor scaling in the allowed error. In contrast, an approach based on fractional-query simulation provides optimal scaling in the error at the expense of poor scaling in the sparsity. Here we combine the two approaches, achieving the best features of both. By implementing a linear combination of quantum walk steps with coefficients given by Bessel functions, our algorithm's complexity (as measured by the number of queries and 2-qubit gates) is logarithmic in the inverse error, and nearly linear in the product $\tau$ of the evolution time, the sparsity, and the magnitude of the largest entry of the Hamiltonian. Our dependence on the error is optimal, and we prove a new lower bound showing that no algorithm can have sublinear dependence on $\tau$.
fields
quant-ph 2years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Proves intractability of DQPT estimation on quantum computers but equivalence of subsystem DQPT decision to quantum circuit simulation, with quadratic speedup for critical time search.
citing papers explorer
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Unbiased Hamiltonian Simulation by Reversing Trotter Error Dynamics
PTER removes Trotter errors in quantum Hamiltonian simulation via quasi-probabilistic reversal of the error dynamics, producing unbiased results with constant overhead.
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Provable Quantum Advantage for Dynamical Phase Transition
Proves intractability of DQPT estimation on quantum computers but equivalence of subsystem DQPT decision to quantum circuit simulation, with quadratic speedup for critical time search.