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Ryu Hayakawa, Kazuki Sakamoto, Chusei Kiumi (Sep 18 2025).
Abstract: The Berry phase is a fundamental quantity in the classification of topological phases of matter. In this paper, we present a new quantum algorithm and several complexity-theoretical results for the Berry phase estimation (BPE) problems. Our new quantum algorithm achieves BPE in a more general setting than previously known quantum algorithms, with a theoretical guarantee. For the complexity-theoretic results, we consider three cases. First, we prove BQP\mathsf{BQP}-completeness when we are given a guiding state that has a large overlap with the ground state. This result establishes an exponential quantum speedup for estimating the Berry phase. Second, we prove dUQMA\mathsf{dUQMA}-completeness when we have \textita priori bound for ground state energy. Here, dUQMA\mathsf{dUQMA} is a variant of the unique witness version of QMA\mathsf{QMA} (i.e., UQMA\mathsf{UQMA}), which we introduce in this paper, and this class precisely captures the complexity of BPE without the known guiding state. Remarkably, this problem turned out to be the first natural problem contained in both UQMA\mathsf{UQMA} and co\mathsf{co}-UQMA\mathsf{UQMA}. Third, we show PdUQMA[log]\mathsf{P}^{\mathsf{dUQMA[log]}}-hardness and containment in PPGQMA[log]\mathsf{P}^{\mathsf{PGQMA[log]}} when we have no additional assumption. These results advance the role of quantum computing in the study of topological phases of matter and provide a pathway for clarifying the connection between topological phases of matter and computational complexity.

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