Abstract

We study the computational strength of quantum particles (each of finite dimensionality) arranged on a line. First, we prove that it is possible to perform universal adiabatic quantum computation using a one-dimensional quantum system (with 9 states per particle). Building on the same construction, but with some additional technical effort and 12 states per particle, we show that the problem of approximating the ground state energy of a system composed of a line of quantum' particles is QMA-complete; QMA is a quantum analogue of NP. This is in striking contrast to the analogous classical problem, one dimensional MAX-2-SAT with nearest neighbor constraints, which is in P.The proof of the QMA-completeness result requires an additional idea beyond the usual techniques in the area: Some illegal configurations cannot be ruled out by local checks, and are instead ruled out because they would, in the future, evolve into a state which can be seen locally to be illegal. Assuming BQP ne QMA, our construction gives a one-dimensional system which takes an exponential time to relax to its ground state at any temperature. This makes it a candidate for a one-dimensional spin glass.

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