Abstract
Boson samplers—set-ups that generate complex many-particle output states through the transmission of elementary many-particle input states across a multitude of mutually coupled modes—promise the efficient quantum simulation of a classically intractable computational task, and challenge the extended Church–Turing thesis, one of the fundamental dogmas of computer science. However, as in all experimental quantum simulations of truly complex systems, one crucial problem remains: how to certify that a given experimental measurement record unambiguously results from enforcing the claimed dynamics, on bosons, fermions or distinguishable particles? Here we offer a statistical solution to the certification problem, identifying an unambiguous statistical signature of many-body quantum interference upon transmission across a multimode, random scattering device. We show that statistical analysis of only partial information on the output state allows to characterise the imparted dynamics through particle type-specific features of the emerging interference patterns. The relevant statistical quantifiers are classically computable, define a falsifiable benchmark for BosonSampling, and reveal distinctive features of many-particle quantum dynamics, which go much beyond mere bunching or anti-bunching effects. Mehr anzeigen
Persistenter Link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000114245Publikationsstatus
publishedExterne Links
Zeitschrift / Serie
New Journal of PhysicsBand
Seiten / Artikelnummer
Verlag
IOP PublishingThema
BosonSampling; Many-particle interference; Quantum statistics; Correlation functions; Random matrix theory; Certification of quantum simulation