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Role of spectral structure in adiabatic ground-state preparation of the XXZ model

Francisco Albarrán-Arriagada, Juan Carlos Retamal·March 16, 2026
Quantum PhysicsMesoscale Physics

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Abstract

Adiabatic ground-state preparation is fundamentally limited by the spectral structure of the time-dependent Hamiltonian, particularly by gap reductions and degeneracies that induce nonadiabatic transitions. We examine this dependence in the anisotropic Heisenberg (XXZ) model on an eight-site ring by comparing three strategies: optimization of the initial Hamiltonian, addition of auxiliary terms, and considering approximate counterdiabatic driving. Owing to anisotropy-dependent level crossings among low-energy states, the XXZ model provides a stringent benchmark. We find that performance is mainly constrained by spectral degeneracies between the ground and excited states. Simple strategies such as initial-Hamiltonian optimization or site-dependent Zeeman fields, suppresses critical crossings and drastically enhance ground-state preparation. In contrast, counterdiabatic terms alone do not improve the protocol when the spectral structure remains level-crossings, becoming effective only after degeneracies are removed. These results identify spectral engineering as a prerequisite for efficient adiabatic ground-state preparation in interacting spin systems.

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