About that useful little corner of Hilbert space and its neural network representations
· Invited
Abstract
The vast majority of quantum states of interest for practical applications have distinctive features and intrinsic structure. These typically occupy only a very limited corner of the vast manifold of allowed quantum states, making them often amenable for compact classical representations.
In this talk I will overview a recently introduced classical representation of many-qubit states based on artificial neural networks.
First I will present results concerning their expressive power, rewiewing representation theorems and arguing that these representations are not limited by the amount of entanglement they can encode.In this context, I will also show a new explicit and polynomially efficient mapping from contractible tensor-network states.
Then, I will show several applications of these variational representations, with a focus on quantum computing applications. Most notably, I will focus on a variational technique useful to simulate large structured quantum circuits, as well as applications of classical neural-network states to benchmark and improve NISQ quantum hardware.
In this talk I will overview a recently introduced classical representation of many-qubit states based on artificial neural networks.
First I will present results concerning their expressive power, rewiewing representation theorems and arguing that these representations are not limited by the amount of entanglement they can encode.In this context, I will also show a new explicit and polynomially efficient mapping from contractible tensor-network states.
Then, I will show several applications of these variational representations, with a focus on quantum computing applications. Most notably, I will focus on a variational technique useful to simulate large structured quantum circuits, as well as applications of classical neural-network states to benchmark and improve NISQ quantum hardware.
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Presenters
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Giuseppe Carleo
- Center for Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute
- Flatiron Institute