Developing techniques for Simulation of SU(3) Quantum Field Theories on State-of-the-Art Quantum Devices
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Abstract
Quantum computing has long been an experimental technology with the potential to enablesimulation at scale of phenomena which on classical devices would be too expensive to simulate
at any but the smallest scales. Over the last several years, however, it has entered the
NISQ era, where the number of qubits are sufficient for quantum advantage but substantial
noise on hardware stands in the way of this achievement. This thesis details improvements
to techniques of quantum simulation of the out-of-equilbrium real-time dynamics of lattice
quantum chromodynamics (LQCD) and of dense 3-flavor neutrino systems on digital quantum
devices that I have contributed to as a Ph.D. student.
LQCD has been numerically computed using classical Monte-Carlo methods for decades
with applications to nuclear and particle physics. However, classical Monte-Carlo methods
experience the numerical sign problem, which limits their ability to solve problems such as
the simulation of out-of-equilibrium real-time evolution. These problems are an ideal place to
look for quantum advantage. The first project in this part is a comparison of gradient descent
and the Bayesian process as choices for the classical optimizer within a variational quantum
eigensolver that initializes the ground state of an SU(3) plaquette-chain. The thesis then
pivots to a 1+1D lattice of quarks interacting with an SU(3) gauge-field. A VQE-based statepreparation
for the vacua and a Trotterized time-evolution circuit is designed and applied to the problems of simulating beta and neutrinoless double beta decay. The latter has been
implemented on Quantinuum's H1-1 trapped ion device. Finally, these circuits are adapted
to a version useable on quantum devices with nearest-neighbor connectivity with minimal
overhead, with an eye towards utilizing the higher qubit count of such devices for hadron
dynamics and scattering.
Physical dense neutrino systems are both highly out-of-equilibrium and are characterized
by a highly entangling interaction, neutral current exchange between neutrinos. This makes
the dynamics of dense neutrino systems, particularly the relatively not-well-studied 3-flavor
variety, an ideal problem to attempt to solve with quantum computers. In this part, Trotterization
circuit-elements for the neutrino-neutrino interactions that happen in ultradense
3-flavor neutrino systems are designed and implemented on Quantinuum's H1-1 trapped ion
device and IBM's ibm torino superconducting device. A circuit for Trotterizing this interaction
on qutrits, which is substantially lower in depth than its qubit counterparts, is also
created. Lastly, by the Gottesman-Knill theorem problems need to exhibit both high entanglement
and high deviation from stabilizer states ("magic") in order to exhibit quantum
advantage. Thus, the second-to-last chapter of the thesis detail results with implications
for the Standard Model in general that the 3 flavor ultradense neutrino systems with the
highest, most-persistent magic are those that start with neutrinos in all 3 flavors.
Description
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2025
