Retrieving the ground state of spin glasses using thermal noise: Performance of quantum annealing at finite temperatures

Kohji Nishimura, Hidetoshi Nishimori, Andrew J. Ochoa, and Helmut G. Katzgraber
Phys. Rev. E 94, 032105 – Published 2 September 2016

Abstract

We study the problem to infer the ground state of a spin-glass Hamiltonian using data from another Hamiltonian with interactions disturbed by noise from the original Hamiltonian, motivated by the ground-state inference in quantum annealing on a noisy device. It is shown that the average Hamming distance between the inferred spin configuration and the true ground state is minimized when the temperature of the noisy system is kept at a finite value, and not at zero temperature. We present a spin-glass generalization of a well-established result that the ground state of a purely ferromagnetic Hamiltonian is best inferred at a finite temperature in the sense of smallest Hamming distance when the original ferromagnetic interactions are disturbed by noise. We use the numerical transfer-matrix method to establish the existence of an optimal finite temperature in one- and two-dimensional systems. Our numerical results are supported by mean-field calculations, which give an explicit expression of the optimal temperature to infer the spin-glass ground state as a function of variances of the distributions of the original interactions and the noise. The mean-field prediction is in qualitative agreement with numerical data. Implications on postprocessing of quantum annealing on a noisy device are discussed.

  • Figure
  • Figure
  • Figure
  • Figure
  • Received 20 May 2016

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.94.032105

©2016 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

  1. Physical Systems
Statistical Physics & Thermodynamics

Authors & Affiliations

Kohji Nishimura1, Hidetoshi Nishimori1, Andrew J. Ochoa2, and Helmut G. Katzgraber2,3

  • 1Department of Physics, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Oh-okayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8551, Japan
  • 2Department of Physics and Astronomy, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-4242, USA
  • 3Santa Fe Institute, 1399 Hyde Park Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501, USA

Article Text (Subscription Required)

Click to Expand

References (Subscription Required)

Click to Expand
Issue

Vol. 94, Iss. 3 — September 2016

Reuse & Permissions
Access Options
CHORUS

Article Available via CHORUS

Download Accepted Manuscript
Author publication services for translation and copyediting assistance advertisement

Authorization Required


×
×

Images

×

Sign up to receive regular email alerts from Physical Review E

Log In

Cancel
×

Search


Article Lookup

Paste a citation or DOI

Enter a citation
×