Posted

Varun Upreti, Nicolás Quesada, Ulysse Chabaud (Apr 22 2026).
Abstract: The effective description of a bosonic quantum system identifies the minimum finite dimension required to capture its essential dynamics. This effective dimension plays an important role in the complexity of classical and quantum algorithms for learning and simulating bosonic systems. While generic bosonic states require a dimension scaling as 1/ϵ21/\epsilon^2 for a precision of approximation ϵ\epsilon, here we identify a natural energy condition which allows us to improve this scaling exponentially to log(1/ϵ)\log(1/\epsilon). We then prove that most bosonic quantum states satisfy this condition, and in particular those produced by combining Gaussian dynamics with generic energy-preserving dynamics, which include the output states of universal bosonic quantum circuits. We apply this finding to enhance learning algorithms for bosonic quantum states and we further obtain new classical simulation algorithms for a large class of bosonic systems. Finally, using efficient decompositions of Kerr gates as sums of Gaussian gates, we significantly refine these classical simulation algorithms for universal bosonic quantum circuits. Our results demonstrate that physical bosonic systems are significantly more well-behaved than previously assumed, allowing for efficient descriptions even at high precision.

Order by:

Want to join this discussion?

Join our community today and start discussing with our members by participating in exciting events, competitions, and challenges. Sign up now to engage with quantum experts!