Abstract

We devise a classical algorithm which efficiently computes the quantum expectation values arising in a class of continuous variable quantum circuits wherein the final quantum observable—after the Heisenberg evolution associated with the circuits—is at most second order in momentum. The classical computational algorithm exploits a specific epistemic restriction in classical phase space which directly captures the quantum uncertainty relation, to transform the quantum circuits in the complex Hilbert space into classical albeit unconventional stochastic processes in the phase space. The resulting multidimensional integral is then evaluated using the Monte Carlo sampling method. The convergence rate of the classical sampling algorithm is determined by the variance of the classical physical quantity over the epistemically restricted phase space distribution. The work shows that for the specific class of computational schemes, Wigner negativity is not a sufficient resource for quantum speedup. It highlights the potential role of the epistemic restriction as an intuitive conceptual tool which may be used to study the boundary between quantum and classical computations.

Highlights

  • We devise a classical algorithm which efficiently computes the quantum expectation values arising in a class of continuous variable quantum circuits wherein the final quantum observable—after the Heisenberg evolution associated with the circuits—is at most second order in momentum

  • Guided by the intuition offered by the epistemically restricted (ER) phase space representation, we devise a classical algorithm which efficiently computes the quantum expectation values arising in a class of continuous variable (CV) quantum computational circuits or CV quantum processes widely encountered in quantum optical ­settings[45,46]

  • We summarise the phase space representation of quantum mechanics based on the ER ensemble of trajectories proposed in Refs.[40,41]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We devise a classical algorithm which efficiently computes the quantum expectation values arising in a class of continuous variable quantum circuits wherein the final quantum observable—after the Heisenberg evolution associated with the circuits—is at most second order in momentum. Note that the above computational scheme for average value can be seen as a classical stochastic process for 2N positions and momentum random variables, but with an initial phase space that is epistemically (statistically) restricted being sampled from the specific ER phase space distribution given by Eq (7).

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call