The cost of solving linear differential equations on a quantum computer: fast-forwarding to explicit resource counts

How well can quantum computers simulate classical dynamical systems? There is increasing effort in developing quantum algorithms to efficiently simulate dynamics beyond Hamiltonian simulation, but so far exact resource estimates are not known. In this work, we provide two significant contributions....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Quantum
Main Authors: David Jennings, Matteo Lostaglio, Robert B. Lowrie, Sam Pallister, Andrew T. Sornborger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Verein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften 2024-12-01
Online Access:https://quantum-journal.org/papers/q-2024-12-10-1553/pdf/
_version_ 1849565146381287424
author David Jennings
Matteo Lostaglio
Robert B. Lowrie
Sam Pallister
Andrew T. Sornborger
author_facet David Jennings
Matteo Lostaglio
Robert B. Lowrie
Sam Pallister
Andrew T. Sornborger
author_sort David Jennings
collection DOAJ
container_title Quantum
description How well can quantum computers simulate classical dynamical systems? There is increasing effort in developing quantum algorithms to efficiently simulate dynamics beyond Hamiltonian simulation, but so far exact resource estimates are not known. In this work, we provide two significant contributions. First, we give the first non-asymptotic computation of the cost of encoding the solution to general linear ordinary differential equations into quantum states – either the solution at a final time, or an encoding of the whole history within a time interval. Second, we show that the stability properties of a large class of classical dynamics allow their fast-forwarding, making their quantum simulation much more time-efficient. From this point of view, quantum Hamiltonian dynamics is a boundary case that does not allow this form of stability-induced fast-forwarding. In particular, we find that the history state can always be output with complexity $O(T^{1/2})$ for any stable linear system. We present a range of asymptotic improvements over state-of-the-art in various regimes. We illustrate our results with a family of dynamics including linearized collisional plasma problems, coupled, damped, forced harmonic oscillators and dissipative nonlinear problems. In this case the scaling is quadratically improved, and leads to significant reductions in the query counts after inclusion of all relevant constant prefactors.
format Article
id doaj-art-87a07e58143244278a4a375d2a0bdfd2
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 2521-327X
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Verein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-87a07e58143244278a4a375d2a0bdfd22025-08-20T02:33:50ZengVerein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den QuantenwissenschaftenQuantum2521-327X2024-12-018155310.22331/q-2024-12-10-155310.22331/q-2024-12-10-1553The cost of solving linear differential equations on a quantum computer: fast-forwarding to explicit resource countsDavid JenningsMatteo LostaglioRobert B. LowrieSam PallisterAndrew T. SornborgerHow well can quantum computers simulate classical dynamical systems? There is increasing effort in developing quantum algorithms to efficiently simulate dynamics beyond Hamiltonian simulation, but so far exact resource estimates are not known. In this work, we provide two significant contributions. First, we give the first non-asymptotic computation of the cost of encoding the solution to general linear ordinary differential equations into quantum states – either the solution at a final time, or an encoding of the whole history within a time interval. Second, we show that the stability properties of a large class of classical dynamics allow their fast-forwarding, making their quantum simulation much more time-efficient. From this point of view, quantum Hamiltonian dynamics is a boundary case that does not allow this form of stability-induced fast-forwarding. In particular, we find that the history state can always be output with complexity $O(T^{1/2})$ for any stable linear system. We present a range of asymptotic improvements over state-of-the-art in various regimes. We illustrate our results with a family of dynamics including linearized collisional plasma problems, coupled, damped, forced harmonic oscillators and dissipative nonlinear problems. In this case the scaling is quadratically improved, and leads to significant reductions in the query counts after inclusion of all relevant constant prefactors.https://quantum-journal.org/papers/q-2024-12-10-1553/pdf/
spellingShingle David Jennings
Matteo Lostaglio
Robert B. Lowrie
Sam Pallister
Andrew T. Sornborger
The cost of solving linear differential equations on a quantum computer: fast-forwarding to explicit resource counts
title The cost of solving linear differential equations on a quantum computer: fast-forwarding to explicit resource counts
title_full The cost of solving linear differential equations on a quantum computer: fast-forwarding to explicit resource counts
title_fullStr The cost of solving linear differential equations on a quantum computer: fast-forwarding to explicit resource counts
title_full_unstemmed The cost of solving linear differential equations on a quantum computer: fast-forwarding to explicit resource counts
title_short The cost of solving linear differential equations on a quantum computer: fast-forwarding to explicit resource counts
title_sort cost of solving linear differential equations on a quantum computer fast forwarding to explicit resource counts
url https://quantum-journal.org/papers/q-2024-12-10-1553/pdf/
work_keys_str_mv AT davidjennings thecostofsolvinglineardifferentialequationsonaquantumcomputerfastforwardingtoexplicitresourcecounts
AT matteolostaglio thecostofsolvinglineardifferentialequationsonaquantumcomputerfastforwardingtoexplicitresourcecounts
AT robertblowrie thecostofsolvinglineardifferentialequationsonaquantumcomputerfastforwardingtoexplicitresourcecounts
AT sampallister thecostofsolvinglineardifferentialequationsonaquantumcomputerfastforwardingtoexplicitresourcecounts
AT andrewtsornborger thecostofsolvinglineardifferentialequationsonaquantumcomputerfastforwardingtoexplicitresourcecounts
AT davidjennings costofsolvinglineardifferentialequationsonaquantumcomputerfastforwardingtoexplicitresourcecounts
AT matteolostaglio costofsolvinglineardifferentialequationsonaquantumcomputerfastforwardingtoexplicitresourcecounts
AT robertblowrie costofsolvinglineardifferentialequationsonaquantumcomputerfastforwardingtoexplicitresourcecounts
AT sampallister costofsolvinglineardifferentialequationsonaquantumcomputerfastforwardingtoexplicitresourcecounts
AT andrewtsornborger costofsolvinglineardifferentialequationsonaquantumcomputerfastforwardingtoexplicitresourcecounts