When can classical neural networks represent quantum states?
This provides a rigorous framework for exploring neural quantum states, which is incremental but important for quantum physics and machine learning applications.
The paper tackled the problem of understanding when classical neural networks can efficiently represent quantum states, showing that conditional correlations in measurement distributions control their performance and depend on entanglement, sign structure, and measurement basis.
A naive classical representation of an n-qubit state requires specifying exponentially many amplitudes in the computational basis. Past works have demonstrated that classical neural networks can succinctly express these amplitudes for many physically relevant states, leading to computationally powerful representations known as neural quantum states. What underpins the efficacy of such representations? We show that conditional correlations present in the measurement distribution of quantum states control the performance of their neural representations. Such conditional correlations are basis dependent, arise due to measurement-induced entanglement, and reveal features not accessible through conventional few-body correlations often examined in studies of phases of matter. By combining theoretical and numerical analysis, we demonstrate how the state's entanglement and sign structure, along with the choice of measurement basis, give rise to distinct patterns of short- or long-range conditional correlations. Our findings provide a rigorous framework for exploring the expressive power of neural quantum states.