Elias X. Huber, Benjamin Y. L. Tan, Paul R. Griffin, Dimitris G. Angelakis
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引用次数: 0
摘要
我们扩展了《量子 5:454, 2021》(Tan et al. in Quantum 5:454,2021)中提出的量子比特高效编码,并将其应用于根据受监管的金融交易所提供的数据构建的金融交易结算问题实例。我们的方法直接适用于任何具有线性不等式约束的 QUBO 问题。我们对以前提出的方法进行了扩展,简化了用于编码相关性的量子比特数量,并提出了一类新的变分电路,该电路包含对称性,从而减少了采样开销,提高了数值稳定性,并恢复了成本目标作为赫米特可观测变量的表达式。我们还提出了保留最优性的方法,以减少真实世界数据中的方差并替代连续松弛变量。我们针对由 16 个事务组成的问题,用标准 QAOA 对我们的方法进行了基准测试,并获得了有竞争力的结果。我们新提出的变分解析法总体表现最佳。我们演示了如何在真实量子硬件上处理 128 个事务的问题,其结果超出了之前以 NISQ 硬件为界的结果近两个数量级。
Exponential qubit reduction in optimization for financial transaction settlement
We extend the qubit-efficient encoding presented in (Tan et al. in Quantum 5:454, 2021) and apply it to instances of the financial transaction settlement problem constructed from data provided by a regulated financial exchange. Our methods are directly applicable to any QUBO problem with linear inequality constraints. Our extension of previously proposed methods consists of a simplification in varying the number of qubits used to encode correlations as well as a new class of variational circuits which incorporate symmetries thereby reducing sampling overhead, improving numerical stability and recovering the expression of the cost objective as a Hermitian observable. We also propose optimality-preserving methods to reduce variance in real-world data and substitute continuous slack variables. We benchmark our methods against standard QAOA for problems consisting of 16 transactions and obtain competitive results. Our newly proposed variational ansatz performs best overall. We demonstrate tackling problems with 128 transactions on real quantum hardware, exceeding previous results bounded by NISQ hardware by almost two orders of magnitude.
期刊介绍:
Driven by advances in technology and experimental capability, the last decade has seen the emergence of quantum technology: a new praxis for controlling the quantum world. It is now possible to engineer complex, multi-component systems that merge the once distinct fields of quantum optics and condensed matter physics.
EPJ Quantum Technology covers theoretical and experimental advances in subjects including but not limited to the following:
Quantum measurement, metrology and lithography
Quantum complex systems, networks and cellular automata
Quantum electromechanical systems
Quantum optomechanical systems
Quantum machines, engineering and nanorobotics
Quantum control theory
Quantum information, communication and computation
Quantum thermodynamics
Quantum metamaterials
The effect of Casimir forces on micro- and nano-electromechanical systems
Quantum biology
Quantum sensing
Hybrid quantum systems
Quantum simulations.