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Arpon Basu, Joshua Brakensiek, Aaron Putterman (May 05 2026).
Abstract: We study the problem of Hamiltonian sparsification: given a parameter ε(0,1)\varepsilon \in (0,1) and an nn-qubit Hamiltonian HH which is the sum of rr-local positive semi-definite (PSD) terms H1,HmH_1, \dots H_m, our goal is to compute a sparse set L[m]L \subseteq [m], along with weights w:LR0w: L \rightarrow \mathbb{R}_{\geq 0} such that for every state ψC2n|\psi\rangle\in \mathbb{C}^{2^n}, iLw(i)ψHiψ(1±ϵ)i=1mψHiψ\sum_i ∈L w(i) \langle \psi | H_i | \psi \rangle ∈(1 \pm \epsilon) \sum_i = 1^m \langle \psi | H_i | \psi \rangle. When the set LL is significantly smaller than mm, this reduces the number of terms in the underlying system, while still ensuring that the behavior of the system is essentially unchanged. We show that many Hamiltonians indeed are sparsifiable to a number of terms much smaller than nrn^r, including: (a) Hamiltonians where each term is an rr-local Pauli string, (b) Hamiltonians where each term is an rr-local random operator of rank RR, for R2r1+1R \geq 2^{r-1}+1, and (c) Hamiltonians where each term is an arbitrary rr-local operator of rank 2r1\geq 2^r -1 (a.k.a. Quantum SAT). Taken together, our results show that the sparsifiability of Hamiltonians is a robust phenomenon, contrary to prevailing belief (see for instance, Aharonov-Zhou ITCS 2019, QIP 2019). Our results find applications, for instance, to better (semi-)streaming algorithms for quantum Max-Cut, answering a question left open by Kallaugher and Parekh (FOCS 2022). In fact, our results even codify that quantum systems are often easier to sparsify than their classical counterparts.

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