Quantum Cut Sparsifiers
Abstract
In this paper, we continue a line of research initiated by Basu, Brakensiek, and Putterman [2026] studying the sparsifiability of Hamiltonians. We focus particularly on the sparsifiability of the widely-studied Quantum Cut (QC) Hamiltonians. Our main result is that in an $n$-qubit system, any $n$-qubit QC Hamiltonian can be sparsified to $\widetilde{O}(n /\varepsilon^2)$ many terms while preserving the energy of every state up to a factor of $1 \pm \varepsilon$. Our result can be interpreted as ...
Description / Details
In this paper, we continue a line of research initiated by Basu, Brakensiek, and Putterman [2026] studying the sparsifiability of Hamiltonians. We focus particularly on the sparsifiability of the widely-studied Quantum Cut (QC) Hamiltonians. Our main result is that in an -qubit system, any -qubit QC Hamiltonian can be sparsified to many terms while preserving the energy of every state up to a factor of . Our result can be interpreted as giving an importance sampling scheme for the edges of an arbitrary graph such that the \emph{Kikuchi} graph at level of the sampled graph is a spectral approximation to the Kikuchi graph of . Importantly, the \emph{same} sampling scheme works simultaneously for all . The natural approach of leverage score sampling, analyzed via matrix concentration inequalities, yields a polynomially worse bound in our setting because the underlying matrices have dimension . Instead, our approach relies on decomposing the action of these matrices into invariant subspaces. Then, by using an operator-valued inequality of Alon and Kozma [Ann. Henri Poincaré, 2020], itself building on an \emph{octopus inequality} of Caputo, Liggett, and Richthammer [J. AMS, 2010], we extend our sparsification technique to all expander graphs. We then invoke expander decomposition to extend our sparsifier to all graphs.
Source: arXiv:2606.09728v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.09728v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2606.09728v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.09728v1
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Jun 9, 2026
Quantum Computing
Quantum Physics
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