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Quantum Simulation
A complexity phase transition at the EPR Hamiltonian
arXiv
Authors: Kunal Marwaha, James Sud
Year
2026
Paper ID
48815
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
168
Citations
N/A
Abstract
We study the computational complexity of 2-local Hamiltonian problems generated by a positive-weight symmetric interaction term, encompassing many canonical problems in statistical mechanics and optimization. We show these problems belong to one of three complexity phases: QMA-complete, StoqMA-complete, and reducible to a new problem we call EPR*. The phases are physically interpretable, corresponding to the energy level ordering of the local term. The EPR* problem is a simple generalization of the EPR problem of King. Inspired by empirically efficient algorithms for EPR, we conjecture that EPR* is in BPP. If true, this would complete the complexity classification of these problems, and imply EPR* is the transition point between easy and hard local Hamiltonians. Our proofs rely on perturbative gadgets. One simple gadget, when recursed, induces a renormalization-group-like flow on the space of local interaction terms. This gives the correct complexity picture, but does not run in polynomial time. To overcome this, we design a gadget based on a large spin chain, which we analyze via the Jordan-Wigner transformation.
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- We study the computational complexity of 2-local Hamiltonian problems generated by a positive-weight symmetric interaction term, encompassing many canonical problems in...
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