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dc.contributor.author
Könz, Mario
dc.contributor.supervisor
Troyer, Matthias
dc.contributor.supervisor
Katzgraber, Helmut G.
dc.contributor.supervisor
Lechner, Wolfgang
dc.date.accessioned
2020-09-11T07:43:45Z
dc.date.available
2020-09-10T16:03:02Z
dc.date.available
2020-09-11T07:43:45Z
dc.date.issued
2019
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11850/439876
dc.identifier.doi
10.3929/ethz-b-000439876
dc.description.abstract
Quantum computing aims to harness the properties of quantum systems to more effectively solve certain kinds of computational tasks. Among quantum computers, quantum annealers are special-purpose machines whose main appeal is their ability to solve hard optimization problems while giving certain theoretical guarantees for correctness. Hard optimization problems can be found in many fields, making good and fast solvers highly sought after. While classical annealing algorithms have been established as very successful heuristics, a potential scaling advantage of a quantum annealer produced great interest. The possibility to manifest those quantum advantages in real devices however remain speculative. In short, the inability to create arbitrary large all-to-all connected graph like structures in hardware forces the use of embeddings, mappings of the original problem onto a quantum system with only short range interactions. Currently there is one main commercial quantum annealer, which uses such an embedding to map the optimization problem onto the hardware. In more recent time, an alternative embedding was proposed, which we will study as well. In order to study the different embeddings, we need a class of optimization problems with potential for quantum annealing. This means picking problems where classical computing does not yet have fast and optimal solvers. We simulate the different embeddings and analyze their scaling compared to simulated quantum annealing, since a classical simulation of quantum annealing has no real world constraints and can realize all-to-all connectivity without any embedding necessary. Our research suggests that there might be an exponential penalty when using these embeddings for finding the embedded ground-state. In a next step, we analyze the ability of quantum annealing to find degenerate ground-states with equal probabilities, a property called fair sampling. With a simple transverse field driver, quantum annealing is known to not sample fairly, i.e. some degenerate ground-states are suppressed exponentially. We will address the conjecture that more advanced drivers will lead to fair sampling. Throughout this thesis, much emphasis is placed on clean software design that maximizes reusability, flexibility and maintainability of the scientific software. This entire thesis should be reproducible with very little effort, since no external data sources are necessary.
en_US
dc.format
application/pdf
en_US
dc.language.iso
en
en_US
dc.publisher
ETH Zurich
en_US
dc.rights.uri
http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-NC/1.0/
dc.title
Embedding penalties for quantum hardware architectures and performance of simulated quantum annealing
en_US
dc.type
Doctoral Thesis
dc.rights.license
In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
dc.date.published
2020-09-11
ethz.size
157 p.
en_US
ethz.code.ddc
DDC - DDC::5 - Science::530 - Physics
en_US
ethz.identifier.diss
25815
en_US
ethz.publication.place
Zurich
en_US
ethz.publication.status
published
en_US
ethz.leitzahl
ETH Zürich::00002 - ETH Zürich::00012 - Lehre und Forschung::00007 - Departemente::02010 - Dep. Physik / Dep. of Physics::02511 - Institut für Theoretische Physik / Institute for Theoretical Physics::03622 - Troyer, Matthias (ehemalig) / Troyer, Matthias (former)
en_US
ethz.date.deposited
2020-09-10T16:03:14Z
ethz.source
FORM
ethz.eth
yes
en_US
ethz.availability
Open access
en_US
ethz.rosetta.installDate
2020-09-11T07:44:15Z
ethz.rosetta.lastUpdated
2020-09-11T07:44:16Z
ethz.rosetta.versionExported
true
ethz.COinS
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