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Non-Linear Transformations of Quantum Amplitudes: Exponential Improvement, Generalization, and Applications

Arthur G. Rattew, P. Rebentrost·September 18, 2023
Physics

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Abstract

Quantum algorithms manipulate the amplitudes of quantum states to find solutions to computational problems. In this work, we present a framework for applying a general class of non-linear functions to the amplitudes of quantum states, with up-to an exponential improvement over the previous work. Our framework accepts a state preparation unitary (or block-encoding), specified as a quantum circuit, defining an $N$-dimensional quantum state. We then construct a diagonal block-encoding of the amplitudes of the quantum state, building on and simplifying previous work. Techniques from the QSVT literature are then used to process this block-encoding. The source of our exponential speedup comes from the quantum analog of importance sampling. We then derive new error-bounds relevant for end-to-end applications, giving the error in terms of $\ell_2$-norm error. We demonstrate the power of this framework with four key applications. First, our algorithm can apply the important function $\tanh(x)$ to the amplitudes of an arbitrary quantum state with at most an $\ell_2$-norm error of $\epsilon$, with worst-case query complexity of $O(\log(N/\epsilon))$, in comparison to the $O(\sqrt{N}\log(N/\epsilon))$ of prior work. Second, we present an algorithm solving a new formulation of maximum finding in the unitary input model. Third, we prove efficient end-to-end complexities in applying a number of common non-linear functions to arbitrary quantum states. Finally, we generalize and unify existing quantum arithmetic-free state-preparation techniques. Our work provides an important and efficient algorithmic building block with potentially numerous applications in areas such as optimization, state preparation, quantum chemistry, and machine learning.

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