Effective-Temperature Reduction of Ising Spin-Glass Problems with Quantum Annealing Correction
ORAL
Abstract
Quantum annealers can sample increasingly larger and highly connected problems. However, the quality of collected samples can be affected by decoherence and analog control errors. We implement and benchmark quantum annealing correction (QAC) on the topology of the D-Wave Advantage quantum annealer, which yields up to 1,300 error-corrected qubits. We demonstrate that QAC outperforms unprotected quantum annealing in finding ground state solutions to random Ising spin glass problems by effectively reducing the temperature of the annealed samples. For the largest sizes available, QAC is also capable of sampling low energy states more efficiently than unprotected quantum annealing, particularly when the disorder of the spin glass problems is susceptible to analog errors.
*This research is based upon work (partially) supported by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), via the U.S. Army Research Office contract W911NF-17-C-0050
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Presenters
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Humberto Munoz-Bauza
- University of Southern California