Abstract

We show that the quantum approximate optimization algorithm (QAOA) can construct, with polynomially scaling resources, the ground state of the fully connected $p$-spin Ising ferromagnet, a problem that notoriously poses severe difficulties to a vanilla quantum annealing (QA) approach due to the exponentially small gaps encountered at first-order phase transition for $p\ensuremath{\ge}3$. For a target ground state at arbitrary transverse field, we find that an appropriate QAOA parameter initialization is necessary to achieve good performance of the algorithm when the number of variational parameters $2P$ is much smaller than the system size $N$ because of the large number of suboptimal local minima. Instead, when $P$ exceeds a critical value ${P}_{N}^{*}\ensuremath{\propto}N$, the structure of the parameter space simplifies, as all minima become degenerate. This allows achieving the ground state with perfect fidelity with a number of parameters scaling extensively with $N$ and with resources scaling polynomially with $N$.

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