DSLGAGQUANT-PHDec 7, 2022

Computing linear sections of varieties: quantum entanglement, tensor decompositions and beyond

arXiv:2212.03851v314 citationsh-index: 22
Originality Highly original
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This provides efficient solutions for generic instances of problems in quantum information theory and tensor decompositions, which are NP-hard in worst-case scenarios.

The paper tackles the NP-hard problem of finding intersections between a conic variety and a linear subspace, developing an algorithm that efficiently solves it for generic subspaces, with applications including polynomial-time algorithms for quantum entanglement problems and uniqueness guarantees for low-rank decompositions.

We study the problem of finding elements in the intersection of an arbitrary conic variety in $\mathbb{F}^n$ with a given linear subspace (where $\mathbb{F}$ can be the real or complex field). This problem captures a rich family of algorithmic problems under different choices of the variety. The special case of the variety consisting of rank-1 matrices already has strong connections to central problems in different areas like quantum information theory and tensor decompositions. This problem is known to be NP-hard in the worst case, even for the variety of rank-1 matrices. Surprisingly, despite these hardness results we develop an algorithm that solves this problem efficiently for "typical" subspaces. Here, the subspace $U \subseteq \mathbb{F}^n$ is chosen generically of a certain dimension, potentially with some generic elements of the variety contained in it. Our main result is a guarantee that our algorithm recovers all the elements of $U$ that lie in the variety, under some mild non-degeneracy assumptions on the variety. As corollaries, we obtain the following new results: $\bullet$ Polynomial time algorithms for several entangled subspaces problems in quantum entanglement, including determining r-entanglement, complete entanglement, and genuine entanglement of a subspace. While all of these problems are NP-hard in the worst case, our algorithm solves them in polynomial time for generic subspaces of dimension up to a constant multiple of the maximum possible. $\bullet$ Uniqueness results and polynomial time algorithmic guarantees for generic instances of a broad class of low-rank decomposition problems that go beyond tensor decompositions. Here, we recover a decomposition of the form $\sum_{i=1}^R v_i \otimes w_i$, where the $v_i$ are elements of the variety $X$. This implies new uniqueness results and genericity guarantees even in the special case of tensor decompositions.

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