A. Ramezanpour

2papers

2 Papers

DIS-NNDec 6, 2018
Enhancing the efficiency of quantum annealing via reinforcement: A path-integral Monte Carlo simulation of the quantum reinforcement algorithm

A. Ramezanpour

The standard quantum annealing algorithm tries to approach the ground state of a classical system by slowly decreasing the hopping rates of a quantum random walk in the configuration space of the problem, where the on-site energies are provided by the classical energy function. In a quantum reinforcement algorithm, the annealing works instead by increasing gradually the strength of the on-site energies according to the probability of finding the walker on each site of the configuration space. Here, by using the path-integral Monte Carlo simulations of the quantum algorithms, we show that annealing via reinforcement can significantly enhance the success probability of the quantum walker. More precisely, we implement a local version of the quantum reinforcement algorithm, where the system wave function is replaced by an approximate wave function using the local expectation values of the system. We use this algorithm to find solutions to a prototypical constraint satisfaction problem (XORSAT) close to the satisfiability to unsatisfiability phase transition. The study is limited to small problem sizes (a few hundreds of variables), nevertheless, the numerical results suggest that quantum reinforcement may provide a useful strategy to deal with other computationally hard problems and larger problem sizes even as a classical optimization algorithm.

DIS-NNJun 13, 2017
Optimization by a quantum reinforcement algorithm

A. Ramezanpour

A reinforcement algorithm solves a classical optimization problem by introducing a feedback to the system which slowly changes the energy landscape and converges the algorithm to an optimal solution in the configuration space. Here, we use this strategy to concentrate (localize) preferentially the wave function of a quantum particle, which explores the configuration space of the problem, on an optimal configuration. We examine the method by solving numerically the equations governing the evolution of the system, which are similar to the nonlinear Schrödinger equations, for small problem sizes. In particular, we observe that reinforcement increases the minimal energy gap of the system in a quantum annealing algorithm. Our numerical simulations and the latter observation show that such kind of quantum feedbacks might be helpful in solving a computationally hard optimization problem by a quantum reinforcement algorithm.