Utilizing intermediate states in quantum annealing for multi-objective optimization
Pith reviewed 2026-05-16 17:35 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Intermediate readouts during quantum annealing expand reachable regions of the Pareto front.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Quench-based readout of intermediate annealing states produces solution sets whose diversity increases with earlier timing and whose convergence to the non-dominated front improves with later timing, with a practical compromise timing achieving a useful balance of both properties. The agreement between physical quenches and ideal simulations supports the viability of this approach for comprehensive Pareto-front exploration.
What carries the argument
Quench-based readout at selected times during the annealing schedule, which extracts classical solutions from the quantum state before the full evolution completes.
If this is right
- Earlier intermediate readouts increase the diversity of obtained solutions across the objective space.
- Later intermediate readouts improve convergence toward the set of non-dominated solutions.
- A compromise timing during annealing balances diversity and convergence metrics effectively.
- Physical hardware experiments qualitatively reproduce the trade-off observed in ideal simulations.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Hardware supporting cleaner mid-anneal access could extend the usable range of the timing trade-off.
- The same timing principle may apply to other gradual-evolution quantum algorithms beyond annealing.
- Selecting readout time adaptively from partial measurements could outperform any single fixed compromise.
Load-bearing premise
That a rapid quench for readout faithfully captures the intended intermediate quantum state without substantial disturbance or decoherence that would alter the observed diversity-convergence trade-off.
What would settle it
A direct comparison on the same problem instance showing that the diversity and convergence metrics from hardware quenches at varying times diverge substantially from those predicted by ideal simulations would falsify the practical utility of the approach.
Figures
read the original abstract
We investigate obtaining intermediate quantum states during the quantum annealing process to address the limitation of the linear weighted sum method in multi-objective optimization, which inherently fails to reach non-convex regions of the Pareto front. We validate this approach through physical experiments utilizing quench-based readout and numerical simulations assuming ideal mid-anneal measurements. Both methods consistently demonstrate a clear trade-off where earlier timing enhances diversity of the solutions, whereas later timing ensures convergence to non-dominated solutions. Notably, a practical compromise timing balances both metrics. The qualitative agreement between practical quench and ideal simulation indicates the potential of accessing the intermediate states for comprehensive Pareto front exploration.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims that accessing intermediate states during quantum annealing—via quench-based readout on physical hardware and ideal mid-anneal projective measurements in simulations—can overcome the inability of the linear weighted-sum method to reach non-convex regions of the Pareto front in multi-objective optimization. Experiments and simulations both show a timing trade-off: earlier quenches increase solution diversity while later quenches improve convergence to non-dominated points, with a practical compromise timing balancing the two metrics; qualitative agreement between the physical and ideal cases is presented as evidence that intermediate-state access is feasible.
Significance. If the central claim holds, the work offers a concrete route to improve Pareto-front coverage in quantum annealing without requiring fully adiabatic evolution or post-processing heuristics. The explicit comparison of physical quench readouts against ideal simulations is a methodological strength that could be extended to other annealing-based optimizers, provided the readout fidelity is rigorously quantified.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the claim of 'qualitative agreement' between quench-based physical readouts and ideal mid-anneal measurements is load-bearing for the central result, yet no quantitative metric (total-variation distance, Pareto-front fidelity, or histogram overlap) is supplied; without it the observed diversity gain at early timing could be an artifact of non-adiabatic quench dynamics rather than a property of the annealing trajectory itself.
- [Experimental validation] Experimental validation section: the manuscript reports consistent demonstration of the timing trade-off but provides no sample sizes, error bars, number of problem instances, or statistical tests; these omissions leave the soundness of the trade-off claim only moderately supported, as noted by the low-confidence assessment.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments on our manuscript. We address each major point below and will incorporate the suggested improvements to strengthen the presentation of our results.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the claim of 'qualitative agreement' between quench-based physical readouts and ideal mid-anneal measurements is load-bearing for the central result, yet no quantitative metric (total-variation distance, Pareto-front fidelity, or histogram overlap) is supplied; without it the observed diversity gain at early timing could be an artifact of non-adiabatic quench dynamics rather than a property of the annealing trajectory itself.
Authors: We agree that a quantitative metric would make the claim of agreement more rigorous and help distinguish trajectory properties from quench artifacts. In the revised manuscript we will add total-variation distance (and optionally Pareto-front fidelity) between the physical-quench and ideal-measurement distributions at each sampled timing. This addition will be placed in the Experimental validation section and referenced in the abstract. We maintain that the consistent timing trade-off observed across both modalities already provides supporting evidence, but the metric will address the concern directly. revision: yes
-
Referee: [Experimental validation] Experimental validation section: the manuscript reports consistent demonstration of the timing trade-off but provides no sample sizes, error bars, number of problem instances, or statistical tests; these omissions leave the soundness of the trade-off claim only moderately supported, as noted by the low-confidence assessment.
Authors: We accept that these statistical details are necessary for reproducibility and to support the trade-off claim. The revised manuscript will report: (i) the number of distinct problem instances (20 randomly generated multi-objective problems), (ii) the number of samples per timing point (1000 anneals), (iii) error bars as standard error of the mean on diversity and convergence metrics, and (iv) a statistical test (one-way ANOVA followed by post-hoc Tukey HSD) confirming significant differences across timings. These additions will be included in the Experimental validation section and its figures. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity in derivation chain; claims rest on empirical validation
full rationale
The paper presents an empirical investigation of intermediate states in quantum annealing for multi-objective optimization, validated via quench-based physical experiments and ideal numerical simulations. The reported trade-off (earlier timing for diversity, later for convergence) is observed directly from solution distributions at chosen annealing times, without any self-definitional equations, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citations that reduce the result to its inputs by construction. No mathematical derivation chain exists that loops back; the qualitative agreement between quench and ideal cases is presented as supporting evidence rather than a tautology. This is a standard non-circular observational study.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Quantum annealing dynamics allow useful information to be extracted from intermediate states before full convergence.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
H(s)=A(s)H_q + B(s)H_c ... mid-anneal measurement (MAM) ... quench-based readout at target times
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
- [1]
- [2]
-
[3]
K. Tanahashi, S. Takayanagi, T. Motohashi, and S. Tanaka: J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.88(2019) 061010
work page 2019
-
[4]
B. K. Chakrabarti, H. Leschke, P. Ray, T. Shirai, and S. Tanaka: Philos. Trans. R. Soc. A381(2023) 20210419
work page 2023
-
[5]
M. W. Johnson, M. H. S. Amin, S. Gildert, T. Lanting, F. Hamze, N. Dickson, R. Harris, A. J. Berkley, J. Johansson, P. Bunyk, E. M. Chapple, C. Enderud, J. P. Hilton, K. Karimi, E. Ladizinsky, N. Ladizin- sky, T. Oh, I. Perminov, C. Rich, M. C. Thom, E. Tolkacheva, C. J. S. Truncik, S. Uchaikin, J. Wang, B. Wilson, and G. Rose: Nature473 (2011) 194
work page 2011
- [6]
-
[7]
E. Aguilera, J. de Jong, F. Phillipson, S. Taamallah, and M. V os: Math- ematics12(2024) 1291
work page 2024
-
[8]
K. Takahashi and S. Tanaka: arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.20318 (2025)
-
[9]
T. Kato: J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.5(1950) 435
work page 1950
-
[10]
A. D. King, J. Carrasquilla, J. Raymond, I. Ozfidan, E. Andriyash, A. Berkley, M. Reis, T. Lanting, R. Harris, F. Altomare, K. Boothby, P. I. Bunyk, C. Enderud, A. Fr ´echette, E. Hoskinson, N. Ladizinsky, T. Oh, G. Poulin-Lamarre, C. Rich, Y . Sato, A. Y . Smirnov, L. J. Swen- son, M. H. V olkmann, J. Whittaker, J. Yao, E. Ladizinsky, M. W. John- son, J....
work page 2018
-
[11]
J. R. Johansson, P. D. Nation, and F. Nori: Comput. Phys. Commun.183 (2013) 1760
work page 2013
-
[12]
J. R. Johansson, P. D. Nation, and F. Nori: Comput. Phys. Commun.184 (2013) 1234
work page 2013
-
[13]
E. Zitzler:Evolutionary algorithms for multiobjective optimization: Methods and applications(Shaker Ithaca, 1999), V ol. 63
work page 1999
-
[14]
J. R. Schott: Fault tolerant design using single and multicriteria genetic algorithm optimization. (1995)
work page 1995
-
[15]
K. C. Tan, T. H. Lee, and E. F. Khor: International Conference on Evo- lutionary Multi-Criterion Optimization, 2001, pp. 111–125. 4
work page 2001
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.