Hybrid quantum-classical algorithms for complex nonlinear partial differential equations with Ginzburg-Landau potential and vortex motion laws
Abstract
We propose quantum algorithms for complex-valued nonlinear partial differential equations in the strongly nonlinear regime, where the dynamics is governed by vortex cores, phase singularities, and nonlinear vortex interactions. Examples include the complex-valued nonlinear Schrödinger equation, as well as nonlinear heat and wave equations with Ginzburg--Landau-type nonlinearity. In the strongly nonlinear regime, the solutions to these equations are asymptotically governed by, in leading order, l...
Description / Details
We propose quantum algorithms for complex-valued nonlinear partial differential equations in the strongly nonlinear regime, where the dynamics is governed by vortex cores, phase singularities, and nonlinear vortex interactions. Examples include the complex-valued nonlinear Schrödinger equation, as well as nonlinear heat and wave equations with Ginzburg--Landau-type nonlinearity. In the strongly nonlinear regime, the solutions to these equations are asymptotically governed by, in leading order, linear elliptic equations, coupled with low-dimensional vortex dynamics, where the vortex cores correspond to topological defects in superconductors. Our hybrid quantum-classical algorithms utilize this asymptotic property, in which the vortex dynamic is advanced classically while the boundary-value problem of linear elliptic equation is handled by quantum algorithms. For the two-dimensional nonlinear Schrödinger equation, we also combine quantum BPX preconditioning with Schrödingerization to estimate physically relevant observables in the small-output regime. This yields, already in two dimensions, an {\it exponential} improvement in the dependence on the spatial problem size, while the dependence on the target accuracy remains essentially linear up to polylogarithmic factors. We further show that the same principle extends to dissipative Ginzburg--Landau vortex dynamics and to vortex filaments in three-dimensional superconductivity. Numerical results support the validity of this PDE reduction and the effectiveness of the proposed approach.
Source: arXiv:2604.14079v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.14079v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.14079v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.14079v1
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Apr 17, 2026
Quantum Computing
Quantum Physics
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