QuadraticHamiltonian#
- class QuadraticHamiltonian(hermitian_part=None, antisymmetric_part=None, constant=0.0, *, num_modes=None, validate=True, rtol=None, atol=None)[fuente]#
Bases:
PolynomialTensor
,Hamiltonian
A Hamiltonian that is quadratic in the fermionic ladder operators.
A quadratic Hamiltonian is an operator of the form
\[\sum_{p, q} M_{pq} a^\dagger_p a_q + \frac12 \sum_{p, q} (\Delta_{pq} a^\dagger_p a^\dagger_q + \text{h.c.}) + \text{constant},\]where \(M\) is a Hermitian matrix and \(\Delta\) is an antisymmetric matrix.
Nota
The
FermionicOp
class can also be used to represent any quadratic Hamiltonian. The reason to have a class specifically for quadratic Hamiltonians is that they support special numerical routines that involve performing linear algebra on the matrices \(M\) and \(\Delta\). The internal representation format ofFermionicOp
is not suitable for these routines.- Parámetros:
hermitian_part (np.ndarray | None) – The matrix \(M\) containing the coefficients of the terms that conserve particle number.
antisymmetric_part (np.ndarray | None) – The matrix \(\Delta\) containing the coefficients of the terms that do not conserve particle number.
constant (float) – An additive constant term.
num_modes (int | None) – Number of fermionic modes. This should be consistent with
hermitian_part
andantisymmetric_part
if they are specified.validate (bool) – Whether to validate the inputs.
rtol (float | None) – Relative numerical tolerance for input validation. The default behavior is to use
self.rtol
.atol (float | None) – Absolute numerical tolerance for input validation. The default behavior is to use
self.atol
.
- Muestra:
ValueError – Either Hermitian part, antisymmetric part, or number of modes must be specified.
ValueError – Hermitian part and antisymmetric part must have same shape.
ValueError – Hermitian part must have shape num_modes x num_modes.
ValueError – Hermitian part must be Hermitian.
ValueError – Antisymmetric part must have shape num_modes x num_modes.
ValueError – Antisymmetric part must be antisymmetric.
Nota
The
rtol
andatol
arguments are only used for input validation and are discarded afterwards. They do not affect the class attributesQuadraticHamiltonian.rtol
andQuadraticHamiltonian.atol
.Attributes
- antisymmetric_part#
The matrix of coefficients of terms that do not conserve particle number.
- atol = 1e-08#
- constant#
The constant.
- hermitian_part#
The matrix of coefficients of terms that conserve particle number.
- num_modes#
The number of modes this operator acts on.
- register_length#
- rtol = 1e-05#
Methods
- classmethod apply(function, *operands, multi=False, validate=True)#
Applies the provided function to the common set of keys of the provided tensors.
The usage of this method is best explained by some examples:
import numpy as np from qiskit_nature.second_q.opertors import PolynomialTensor rand_a = np.random.random((2, 2)) rand_b = np.random.random((2, 2)) a = PolynomialTensor({"+-": rand_a}) b = PolynomialTensor({"+": np.random.random(2), "+-": rand_b}) # transpose a_transpose = PolynomialTensor.apply(np.transpose, a) print(a_transpose == PolynomialTensor({"+-": rand_a.transpose()})) # True # conjugate a_complex = 1j * a a_conjugate = PolynomialTensor.apply(np.conjugate, a_complex) print(a_conjugate == PolynomialTensor({"+-": -1j * rand_a})) # True # kronecker product ab_kron = PolynomialTensor.apply(np.kron, a, b) print(ab_kron == PolynomialTensor({"+-": np.kron(rand_a, rand_b)})) # True # Note: that ab_kron does NOT contain the "+" and "+-+" keys although b contained the # "+" key. That is because the function only gets applied to the keys which are common # to all tensors passed to it. # computing eigenvectors hermi_a = np.array([[1, -2j], [2j, 5]]) a = PolynomialTensor({"+-": hermi_a}) _, eigenvectors = PolynomialTensor.apply(np.linalg.eigh, a, multi=True, validate=False) print(eigenvectors == PolynomialTensor({"+-": np.eigh(hermi_a)[1]})) # True
Nota
The provided function will only be applied to the internal arrays of the common keys of all provided
PolynomialTensor
instances. That means, that no cross-products will be generated.- Parámetros:
function (Callable[[...], ndarray | SparseArray | complex]) – the function to apply to the internal arrays of the provided operands. This function must take numpy (or sparse) arrays as its positional arguments. The number of arguments must match the number of provided operands.
operands (PolynomialTensor) – a sequence of
PolynomialTensor
instances on which to operate.multi (bool) – when set to True this indicates that the provided numpy function will return multiple new numpy arrays which will each be wrapped into a
PolynomialTensor
instance separately.validate (bool) – when set to False the
data
will not be validated. Disable this setting with care!
- Devuelve:
A new
PolynomialTensor
instance with the resulting arrays.- Tipo del valor devuelto:
PolynomialTensor | list[qiskit_nature.second_q.operators.polynomial_tensor.PolynomialTensor]
- compose(other, qargs=None, front=False)#
Returns the matrix multiplication with another
PolynomialTensor
.- Parámetros:
other (PolynomialTensor) – the other PolynomialTensor.
qargs (None) – UNUSED.
front (bool) – If
True
, composition uses right matrix multiplication, otherwise left multiplication is used (the default).
- Muestra:
NotImplementedError – when the two tensors do not have the same
register_length
.- Devuelve:
The tensor resulting from the composition.
- Tipo del valor devuelto:
Nota
Composition (
&
) by default is defined as left matrix multiplication for operators, while@
(equivalent todot()
) is defined as right matrix multiplication. This means thatA & B == A.compose(B)
is equivalent toB @ A == B.dot(A)
whenA
andB
are of the same type.Setting the
front=True
keyword argument changes this to right matrix multiplication which is equivalent to thedot()
methodA.dot(B) == A.compose(B, front=True)
.
- conserves_particle_number()[fuente]#
Whether the Hamiltonian conserves particle number.
- Tipo del valor devuelto:
- diagonalizing_bogoliubov_transform()[fuente]#
Return the transformation matrix that diagonalizes a quadratic Hamiltonian.
Recall that a quadratic Hamiltonian has the form
\[\sum_{p, q} M_{pq} a^\dagger_p a_q + \frac12 \sum_{p, q} (\Delta_{pq} a^\dagger_p a^\dagger_q + \text{h.c.}) + \text{constant}\]where the \(a^\dagger_j\) are fermionic creation operations. A quadratic Hamiltonian can always be rewritten in the form
\[\sum_{j} \varepsilon_j b^\dagger_j b_j + \text{constant},\]where the \(b^\dagger_j\) are a new set of fermionic creation operators that also satisfy the canonical anticommutation relations. These new creation operators are linear combinations of the old ladder operators. When the Hamiltonian conserves particle number (\(\Delta = 0\)) then only creation operators need to be mixed together:
\[\begin{split}\begin{pmatrix} b^\dagger_1 \\ \vdots \\ b^\dagger_N \\ \end{pmatrix} = W \begin{pmatrix} a^\dagger_1 \\ \vdots \\ a^\dagger_N \\ \end{pmatrix},\end{split}\]where \(W\) is an \(N \times N\) unitary matrix. However, in the general case, both creation and annihilation operators are mixed together:
\[\begin{split}\begin{pmatrix} b^\dagger_1 \\ \vdots \\ b^\dagger_N \\ \end{pmatrix} = W \begin{pmatrix} a^\dagger_1 \\ \vdots \\ a^\dagger_N \\ a_1 \\ \vdots \\ a_N \end{pmatrix},\end{split}\]where now \(W\) is an \(N \times 2N\) matrix with orthonormal rows (which satisfies additional constraints).
- Devuelve:
The matrix \(W\), which is either an \(N \times N\) (when \(\Delta = 0\)) or an \(N \times 2N\) (when \(\Delta \neq 0\)) matrix
A numpy array containing the orbital energies \(\varepsilon_j\) sorted in ascending order
The constant
- Tipo del valor devuelto:
- dot(other, qargs=None)#
Return the right multiplied operator self * other.
- Parámetros:
other (Operator) – an operator object.
qargs (list or None) – Optional, a list of subsystem positions to apply other on. If None apply on all subsystems (default: None).
- Devuelve:
The right matrix multiplied Operator.
- Tipo del valor devuelto:
Operator
Nota
The dot product can be obtained using the
@
binary operator. Hencea.dot(b)
is equivalent toa @ b
.
- classmethod einsum(einsum_map, *operands, validate=True)#
Applies the various Einsum convention operations to the provided tensors.
This method wraps the
numpy.einsum()
function, allowing very complex operations to be applied efficiently to the matrices stored inside the providedPolynomialTensor
operands.As an example, let us compute the exact exchange term of an
qiskit_nature.second_q.hamiltonians.ElectronicEnergy
hamiltonian:# a PolynomialTensor containing the two-body terms of an ElectronicEnergy hamiltonian two_body = PolynomialTensor({"++--": ...}) # an electronic density: density = PolynomialTensor({"+-": ...}) # computes the ElectronicEnergy.exchange operator exchange = PolynomialTensor.einsum( {"pqrs,qs->pr": ("++--", "+-", "+-")}, two_body, density, ) # result will be contained in exchange["+-"]
Another example is the mapping from the AO to MO basis, as implemented by the
qiskit_nature.second_q.transformers.BasisTransformer
.# the one- and two-body integrals of a hamiltonian hamiltonian = PolynomialTensor({"+-": ..., "++--": ...}) # the AO-to-MO transformation coefficients mo_coeff = PolynomialTensor({"+-": ...}) einsum_map = { "jk,ji,kl->il": ("+-", "+-", "+-", "+-"), "prsq,pi,qj,rk,sl->iklj": ("++--", "+-", "+-", "+-", "+-", "++--"), } transformed = PolynomialTensor.einsum( einsum_map, hamiltonian, mo_coeff, mo_coeff, mo_coeff, mo_coeff ) # results will be contained in transformed["+-"] and transformed["++--"], respectively
Nota
sparse.SparseArray
supportsopt_einsum.contract` if ``opt_einsum
is installed. It does not supportnumpy.einsum
. In this case, the resultantPolynomialTensor
will contain all dense numpy arrays. If a user would like to work with a sparse array instead, they should installopt_einsum
or they should convert it explicitly using theto_sparse()
method.- Parámetros:
einsum_map (dict[str, tuple[str, ...]]) – a dictionary, mapping from
numpy.einsum()
subscripts to a tuple of strings. These strings correspond to the keys of matrices to be extracted from the providedPolynomialTensor
operands. The last string in this tuple indicates the key under which to store the result in the returnedPolynomialTensor
.operands (PolynomialTensor) – a sequence of
PolynomialTensor
instances on which to operate.validate (bool) – when set to False the
data
will not be validated. Disable this setting with care!
- Devuelve:
A new
PolynomialTensor
.- Tipo del valor devuelto:
- classmethod empty()#
Constructs an empty tensor.
- Devuelve:
The empty tensor.
- Tipo del valor devuelto:
- equiv(other)#
Check equivalence of
PolynomialTensor
instances.Nota
This check only asserts the internal matrix elements for equivalence but ignores the type of the matrices. As such, it will indicate equivalence of two
PolynomialTensor
instances even if one contains sparse and the other dense numpy arrays, as long as their elements match.
- expand(other)#
Returns the reverse-order tensor product with another
PolynomialTensor
.- Parámetros:
other (PolynomialTensor) – the other PolynomialTensor.
- Muestra:
NotImplementedError – when the two tensors do not have the same
register_length
.- Devuelve:
The tensor resulting from the tensor product, \(other \otimes self\).
- Tipo del valor devuelto:
Nota
Expand is the opposite operator ordering to
tensor()
. For two tensors of the same typea.expand(b) = b.tensor(a)
.
- get(k[, d]) D[k] if k in D, else d. d defaults to None. #
- interpret(result)#
Interprets an
EigenstateResult
in this hamiltonians context.- Parámetros:
result (EigenstateResult) – the result to add meaning to.
- items() a set-like object providing a view on D's items #
- keys() a set-like object providing a view on D's keys #
- majorana_form()[fuente]#
Return the Majorana representation of the Hamiltonian.
The Majorana representation of a quadratic Hamiltonian is
\[\frac{i}{2} \sum_{j, k} A_{jk} f_j f_k + \text{constant}\]where \(A\) is a real antisymmetric matrix and the \(f_i\) are normalized Majorana fermion operators, which satisfy the relations:
\[ \begin{align}\begin{aligned}f_j = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}} (a^\dagger_j + a_j)\\f_{j + N} = \frac{i}{\sqrt{2}} (a^\dagger_j - a_j)\end{aligned}\end{align} \]- Devuelve:
The matrix \(A\)
The constant
- Tipo del valor devuelto:
- power(n)#
Return the compose of a operator with itself n times.
- Parámetros:
n (int) – the number of times to compose with self (n>0).
- Devuelve:
the n-times composed operator.
- Tipo del valor devuelto:
Clifford
- Muestra:
QiskitError – if the input and output dimensions of the operator are not equal, or the power is not a positive integer.
- split(function, indices_or_sections, *, validate=True)#
Splits the acted on tensor instance using the given numpy splitting function.
The usage of this method is best explained by some examples:
import numpy as np from qiskit_nature.second_q.opertors import PolynomialTensor rand_ab = np.random.random((4, 4)) ab = PolynomialTensor({"+-": rand_ab}) # np.hsplit a, b = ab.split(np.hsplit, [2], validate=False) print(a == PolynomialTensor({"+-": np.hsplit(ab, [2])[0], validate=False)})) # True print(b == PolynomialTensor({"+-": np.hsplit(ab, [2])[1], validate=False)})) # True # np.vsplit a, b = ab.split(np.vsplit, [2], validate=False) print(a == PolynomialTensor({"+-": np.vsplit(ab, [2])[0], validate=False)})) # True print(b == PolynomialTensor({"+-": np.vsplit(ab, [2])[1], validate=False)})) # True
Nota
When splitting arrays this will likely lead to array shapes which would fail the shape validation check (as you can see from the examples above where we explicitly disable them). This is considered an advanced use case which is why the user is left to disable this check themselves, to ensure they know what they are doing.
- Parámetros:
function (Callable[[...], ndarray | SparseArray | Number]) – the splitting function to use. This function must take a single numpy (or sparse) array as its first input followed by a sequence of indices to split on. You should use
functools.partial
if you need to provide keyword arguments (e.g.partial(np.split, axis=-1)
). Common methods to use here arenumpy.hsplit()
andnumpy.vsplit()
.indices_or_sections (int | Sequence[int]) – a single index or sequence of indices to split on.
validate (bool) – when set to False the
data
will not be validated. Disable this setting with care!
- Devuelve:
New
PolynomialTensor
instances containing the split arrays.- Tipo del valor devuelto:
list[qiskit_nature.second_q.operators.polynomial_tensor.PolynomialTensor]
- classmethod stack(function, operands, *, validate=True)#
Stacks the provided sequence of tensors using the given numpy stacking function.
The usage of this method is best explained by some examples:
import numpy as np from qiskit_nature.second_q.opertors import PolynomialTensor rand_a = np.random.random((2, 2)) rand_b = np.random.random((2, 2)) a = PolynomialTensor({"+-": rand_a}) b = PolynomialTensor({"+": np.random.random(2), "+-": rand_b}) # np.hstack ab_hstack = PolynomialTensor.stack(np.hstack, [a, b], validate=False) print(ab_hstack == PolynomialTensor({"+-": np.hstack([a, b], validate=False)})) # True # np.vstack ab_vstack = PolynomialTensor.stack(np.vstack, [a, b], validate=False) print(ab_vstack == PolynomialTensor({"+-": np.vstack([a, b], validate=False)})) # True
Nota
The provided function will only be applied to the internal arrays of the common keys of all provided
PolynomialTensor
instances. That means, that no cross-products will be generated.Nota
When stacking arrays this will likely lead to array shapes which would fail the shape validation check (as you can see from the examples above where we explicitly disable them). This is considered an advanced use case which is why the user is left to disable this check themselves, to ensure they know what they are doing.
- Parámetros:
function (Callable[[...], ndarray | SparseArray | Number]) – the stacking function to apply to the internal arrays of the provided operands. This function must take a sequence of numpy (or sparse) arrays as its first argument. You should use
functools.partial
if you need to provide keyword arguments (e.g.partial(np.stack, axis=-1)
). Common methods to use here arenumpy.hstack()
andnumpy.vstack()
.operands (Sequence[PolynomialTensor]) – a sequence of
PolynomialTensor
instances on which to operate.validate (bool) – when set to False the
data
will not be validated. Disable this setting with care!
- Devuelve:
A new
PolynomialTensor
instance with the resulting arrays.- Tipo del valor devuelto:
- tensor(other)#
Returns the tensor product with another
PolynomialTensor
.- Parámetros:
other (PolynomialTensor) – the other PolynomialTensor.
- Muestra:
NotImplementedError – when the two tensors do not have the same
register_length
.- Devuelve:
The tensor resulting from the tensor product, \(self \otimes other\).
- Tipo del valor devuelto:
Nota
The tensor product can be obtained using the
^
binary operator. Hencea.tensor(b)
is equivalent toa ^ b
.Nota
Tensor uses reversed operator ordering to
expand()
. For two tensors of the same typea.tensor(b) = b.expand(a)
.
- to_dense()#
Returns a new instance where all matrices are now dense tensors.
If the instance on which this method was called already fulfilled this requirement, it is returned unchanged.
- Tipo del valor devuelto:
- to_sparse(*, sparse_type=<class 'qiskit_nature.second_q.operators.polynomial_tensor.COO'>)#
Returns a new instance where all matrices are now sparse tensors.
If the instance on which this method was called already fulfilled this requirement, it is returned unchanged.
- Parámetros:
sparse_type (Type[COO] | Type[DOK] | Type[GCXS]) – the type to use for the conversion to sparse matrices. Note, that this will only be applied to matrices which were previously dense tensors. Sparse arrays of another type will not be explicitly converted.
- Devuelve:
A new
PolynomialTensor
with all its matrices converted to the requested sparse array type.- Tipo del valor devuelto:
- values() an object providing a view on D's values #