Learning to predict arbitrary quantum processes
This addresses the challenge of efficiently simulating complex quantum dynamics, which is crucial for quantum computing and physics applications, representing a novel method rather than an incremental improvement.
The paper tackles the problem of predicting arbitrary quantum processes efficiently, showing that a machine learning algorithm can learn to predict local properties of outputs from unknown quantum processes with small average error, even for circuits with exponentially many gates, as demonstrated numerically for systems up to 50 qubits and evolution times up to 10^6.
We present an efficient machine learning (ML) algorithm for predicting any unknown quantum process $\mathcal{E}$ over $n$ qubits. For a wide range of distributions $\mathcal{D}$ on arbitrary $n$-qubit states, we show that this ML algorithm can learn to predict any local property of the output from the unknown process~$\mathcal{E}$, with a small average error over input states drawn from $\mathcal{D}$. The ML algorithm is computationally efficient even when the unknown process is a quantum circuit with exponentially many gates. Our algorithm combines efficient procedures for learning properties of an unknown state and for learning a low-degree approximation to an unknown observable. The analysis hinges on proving new norm inequalities, including a quantum analogue of the classical Bohnenblust-Hille inequality, which we derive by giving an improved algorithm for optimizing local Hamiltonians. Numerical experiments on predicting quantum dynamics with evolution time up to $10^6$ and system size up to $50$ qubits corroborate our proof. Overall, our results highlight the potential for ML models to predict the output of complex quantum dynamics much faster than the time needed to run the process itself.