5
talks
1
posters
2
committee roles
0
leadership roles
2021–2026
years active
Contributions
QIP QCrypt TQC presenter award · △program ◇steering ○organising □local · filled = chair
Talks
| Title | Conference | Type | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Circuit complexity and classical simulation of Many-Body Localized Systems | QIP 2023 | regular | ▸Adam Ehrenberg, Christopher L. Baldwin, Dmitry A. Abanin, Alexey Gorshkov |
| Tight bounds on the convergence of noisy random circuits to uniform | QIP 2022 | regular ▸ presenter | Bill Fefferman, Alexey Gorshkov, Michael Gullans, Pradeep Niroula, Oles Shtanko |
| Optimal State Transfer and Entanglement Generation in Power-law Interacting Systems | QIP 2021 | regular | Minh Tran, Andrew Guo, Andrew Lucas, Alexey Gorshkov |
Abstract We present an optimal protocol for encoding an unknown qubit state into a multiqubit Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger-like state and, consequently, transferring quantum information in large systems exhibiting power-law ($1/r^\alpha$) interactions. For all power-law exponents $\alpha$ between $d$ and $2d+1$, where $d$ is the dimension of the system, the protocol yields a polynomial speedup for $\alpha>2d$ and a superpolynomial speedup for $\alpha\leq 2d$, compared to the state of the art. For all $\alpha>d$, the protocol saturates the Lieb-Robinson bounds (up to subpolynomial corrections), thereby establishing the optimality of the protocol and the tightness of the bounds in this regime. The protocol has a wide range of applications, including in quantum sensing, quantum computing, and preparation of topologically ordered states. |
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| The importance of the spectral gap in estimating ground-state energies | QIP 2021 | regular | Alexey Gorshkov, Bill Fefferman |
Abstract The field of quantum Hamiltonian complexity lies at the intersection of quantum many-body physics and computational complexity theory, with deep implications to both fields. The main object of study is the LocalHamiltonian problem, which is concerned with estimating the ground-state energy of a local Hamiltonian and is complete for the class QMA, a quantum generalization of the class NP. A major challenge in the field is to understand the complexity of the LocalHamiltonian problem in more physically natural parameter regimes. One crucial parameter in understanding the ground space of any Hamiltonian in many-body physics is the spectral gap, which is the difference between the smallest two eigenvalues. Despite its importance in quantum many-body physics, the role played by the spectral gap in the complexity of the LocalHamiltonian is less well-understood. In this work, we make progress on this question by considering the precise regime, in which one estimates the ground-state energy to within inverse exponential precision. Computing ground-state energies precisely is a task that is important for quantum chemistry and quantum many-body physics. In the setting of inverse-exponential precision, there is a surprising result that the complexity of LocalHamiltonian is magnified from QMA to PSPACE, the class of problems solvable in polynomial space. We clarify the reason behind this boost in complexity. Specifically, we show that the full complexity of the high precision case only comes about when the spectral gap is exponentially small. As a consequence of the proof techniques developed to show our results, we uncover important implications for the representability and circuit complexity of ground states of local Hamiltonians, the theory of uniqueness of quantum witnesses, and techniques for the amplification of quantum witnesses in the presence of postselection. |
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| Implementing a fast unbounded quantum fanout gate using power-law interactions | TQC 2021 | regular | Andrew Guo, Su-Kuan Chu, Zachary Eldredge, Przemyslaw Bienias, Dhruv Devulapalli, Yuan Su, Andrew Childs, Alexey Gorshkov |
Posters
| Title | Conference | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|
| Dynamic parameterized quantum circuits: expressive and barren-plateau free | QIP 2025 | Marcel Hinsche, Sona Najafi, Kunal Sharma, Ryan Sweke, Christa Zoufal |
Committee service
| Conference | Committee | Position | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| QIP 2026 | PC | member | — |
| TQC 2025 | PC | member | — |
Collaborators
| Co-author | Joint talks |
|---|---|
| Alexey Gorshkov | 5 |
| Andrew Guo | 2 |
| Bill Fefferman | 2 |
| Adam Ehrenberg | 1 |
| Andrew Childs | 1 |
| Andrew Lucas | 1 |
| Christa Zoufal | 1 |
| Christopher L. Baldwin | 1 |
| Dhruv Devulapalli | 1 |
| Dmitry A. Abanin | 1 |
| Kunal Sharma | 1 |
| Marcel Hinsche | 1 |
| Michael Gullans | 1 |
| Minh Tran | 1 |
| Oles Shtanko | 1 |
| Pradeep Niroula | 1 |
| Przemyslaw Bienias | 1 |
| Ryan Sweke | 1 |
| Sona Najafi | 1 |
| Su-Kuan Chu | 1 |