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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing

Provably Efficient Quantum Algorithms for Solving Nonlinear Differential Equations Using Multiple Bosonic Modes Coupled with Qubits

arXiv
Authors: Yu Gan, Hirad Alipanah, Jinglei Cheng, Zeguan Wu, Guangyi Li, Juan José Mendoza-Arenas, Peyman Givi, Mujeeb R. Malik, Brian J. McDermott, Junyu Liu

Year

2025

Paper ID

17224

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

214

Citations

N/A

Abstract

Quantum computers have long been expected to efficiently solve complex classical differential equations. Most digital, fault-tolerant approaches use Carleman linearization to map nonlinear systems to linear ones and then apply quantum linear-system solvers. However, provable speedups typically require digital truncation and full fault tolerance, rendering such linearization approaches challenging to implement on current hardware. Here we present an analog, continuous-variable algorithm based on coupled bosonic modes with qubit-based adaptive measurements that avoids Hilbert-space digitization. This method encodes classical fields as coherent states and, via Kraus-channel composition derived from the Koopman-von Neumann (KvN) formalism, maps nonlinear evolution to linear dynamics. Unlike many analog schemes, the algorithm is provably efficient: advancing a first-order, L-grid point, d-dimensional, order-K spatial-derivative, degree-r polynomial-nonlinearity, strongly dissipative partial differential equations (PDEs) for T time steps costs mathcal{O}left\(T(log L + d r log K\)right). The capability of the scheme is demonstrated by using it to simulate the one-dimensional Burgers' equation and two-dimensional Fisher-KPP equation. The resilience of the method to photon loss is shown under strong-dissipation conditions and an analytic counterterm is derived that systematically cancels the dominant, experimentally calibrated noise. This work establishes a continuous-variable framework for simulating nonlinear systems and identifies a viable pathway toward practical quantum speedup on near-term analog hardware.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2025 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • Quantum computers have long been expected to efficiently solve complex classical differential equations.

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