Background on Quantum Random Access Optimization: Quantum relaxations, quantum random access codes, rounding schemes#
This material provides a deeper look into the concepts behind Quantum Random Access Optimization.
Relaxations#
Consider a binary optimization problem defined on binary variables \(m_i \in \{-1,1\}\). The choice of using \(\pm 1\) variables instead of \(0/1\) variables is not important, but will be convenient in terms of notation when we begin to re-cast this problem in terms of quantum observables. We will be primarily interested in quadratic unconstrained binary optimization (QUBO) problems, although the ideas in this document can readily extend to problems with more than quadratic terms, and problems with non-binary or constrained variables can often be recast as a QUBO (though this conversion will incur some overhead).
Within mathematical optimization, relaxation is the strategy of taking some hard problem and mapping it onto a similar version of that problem which is (usually) easier to solve. The core idea here is that for useful relaxations, the solution to the relaxed problem can give information about the original problem and allow one to heuristically find better solutions. An example of relaxation could be something as simple as taking a discrete optimization problem and allowing a solver to optimize the problem using continuous variables. Once a solution is obtained for the relaxed problem, the solver must find a strategy for extracting a discrete solution from the relaxed solution of continuous values. This process of mapping the relaxed solution back onto original problem’s set of admissible solutions is often referred to as rounding.
For a concrete example of relaxation and rounding, see the Goemans-Williamson Algorithm for MaxCut.
Without loss of generality, the rest of this document will consider a MaxCut objective function defined on a graph \(G = (V,E)\). Our goal is to find a partitioning of our vertices \(V\) into two sets (\(+1\) and \(-1\)), such that we maximize the number of edges which connect both sets. More concretely, each \(v_i \in V\) will be assigned a binary variable \(m_i \in \{-1, 1\}\), and we will define the cut of a variable assignment as:
Quantum Relaxation#
Our goal is to define a relaxation of our MaxCut objective function. We will do this by mapping our objective function’s binary variables into the space of single qubit Pauli observables and by embedding the set of feasible inputs to cut(\(m\)) onto the space of single-qubit quantum product states. Let us denote this embedding \(F\) as:
where \(M = |V|\), and \(H\) is a quantum Hamiltonian which encodes our objective function.
For this to be a valid relaxation of our problem, it must be the case that:
In order to guarantee this is true, we will enforce the stronger condition that our relaxation commutes with our objective function. In other words, cut(\(m\)) is equal to the relaxed objective function for all \(m \in \{-1,1\}^M\), rather than simply upper bounding it. This detail will become crucially important further down when we explicitly define our quantum relaxation.
A Simple Quantum Relaxation#
Before explicating the full quantum relaxation scheme based on single-qubit Quantum Random Access Codes (QRACs), it may be helpful to first discuss a version of quantum optimization which users may be more familiar with, but discussed in the language of quantum relaxation and rounding.
Consider the embedding
where \(Z_i\) indicates the single qubit Pauli-Z observable defined on the \(i\)’th qubit and identity terms on all other qubits. It is worth convincing yourself that this transformation is a valid relaxation of our problem. In particular:
This sort of embedding is currently used by many near-term quantum optimization algorithms, including many QAOA and VQE based approaches. Observe how although the relaxed version of our problem can exactly reproduce the objective function cut(\(m\)) for inputs of the form \(\{|0\rangle,|1\rangle\}^{\otimes M}\), we are also free to evaluate \(H^{(1)}\) using a continuous superposition of such states. This stands in analogy to how one might classically relax an optimization problem such that they optimize the objective function using continuous values.
Crucially, a relaxation is only useful if there is some practical way to round relaxed solutions back onto the original problem’s set of admissible solutions. For this particular quantum relaxation, the rounding scheme is simply given by measuring each qubit of our relaxed solution in the \(Z\)-basis. Measurement will project any quantum state onto the set of computational basis states, and consequently, onto the image of \(F^{(1)}\).
Quantum Relaxations via Quantum Random Access Codes (QRACs)#
Quantum Random Access Codes were first outlined in 1983 by Stephen Wiesner [2] and were used in the context of communication complexity theory. We will not be using QRACs in the way they were originally conceived, instead we are co-opting them to define our quantum relaxations. For this reason will not provide a full introduction to RACs or QRACs, but encourage interested readers to seek out more information about them.
\((1,1,1)\), \((2,1,p)\), and \((3,1,p)\) Quantum Random Access Codes#
A \((k,1,p)\)-QRAC, is a scheme for embedding \(k\) classical bits into a 1-qubit state, such that given a single copy of this state, you can recover any one of the \(k\)-bits with probability \(p\) by performing some measurement. The simple quantum relaxation discussed in the previous section is an example of a trivial \((1,1,1)\)-QRAC. For convenience, we will write the \((2,1,0.854)\) and \((3,1,0.789)\) QRACs as \((2,1,p)\) and \((3,1,p)\), respectively. It is worth noting \((4, 1, p)\)-QRAC \((p > 1/2)\) has been proven to be impossible. [3]
As we generalize the simple example above, it will be helpful to write out single qubit states decomposed in the Hermitian basis of Pauli observables.
The embeddings \(F^{(1)}\), \(F^{(2)}\), and \(F^{(3)}\) associated respectively with the \((1,1,1), (2,1,p),\) and \((3,1,p)\) QRACs can now be written as follows:
Note that for when using a \((k,1,p)\)-QRAC with bit strings \(m \in \{-1,1\}^M, M > k\), these embeddings scale naturally via composition by tensor product.
Similarly, when \(k \nmid M\), we can simply pad our input bitstring with the appropriate number of \(+1\) values.
Recovering Encoded Bits#
Given a QRAC state, we can recover the values of the encoded bits by estimating the expectation value of each bit’s corresponding observable. Note that there is a re-scaling factor which depends on the density of the QRAC.
Encoded Problem Hamiltonians#
Using the tools we have outlined above, we can explicitly write out the Hamiltonians which encode the relaxed versions of our MaxCut problem. We do this by substituting each decision variable with the unique observable that has been assigned to that variable under the embedding \(F\).
Note that here, \(P_{[i]}\) indicates a single-qubit Pauli observable corresponding to decision variable \(i\). The bracketed index here is to make clear that \(P_{[i]}\) will not necessarily be acting on qubit \(i\), because the \((2,1,p)\) and \((3,1,p)\) no longer have a 1:1 relationship between qubits and decision variables.
Commutation of Quantum Relaxation#
Note that for the \((2,1,p)\) and \((3,1,p)\) QRACs, we are associating multiple decision variables to each qubit. This means that each decision variable is assigned a unique single-qubit Pauli observable and some subsets of these Pauli observables will be defined on the same qubits. This can potentially pose a problem when trying to ensure the commutativity condition discussed earlier
Observe that under the \((3,1,p)\)-QRAC, any term in our objective function of the form \((1 - x_i x_j)\) will map to a Hamiltonian term of the form \((1-3\cdot P_{[i]} P_{[j]})\). If both \(P_{[i]}\) and \(P_{[j]}\) are acting on different qubits, then \(P_{[i]}\cdot P_{[j]} = P_{[i]}\otimes P_{[j]}\) and this term of our Hamiltonian will behave as we expect.
If however, \(P_{[i]}\) and \(P_{[j]}\) are acting on the same qubit, the two Paulis will compose directly. Recall that the Pauli matrices form a group and are self-inverse, thus we can deduce that the product of two distinct Paulis will yield another element of the group and it will not be the identity.
Practically, this means that our commutation relationship will break and \(\text{cut}(m) \not= \text{Tr}\big(H^{(1)}F^{(3)}(m)\big)\)
In order to restore the commutation of our encoding with our objective function, we must introduce an additional constraint on the form of our problem Hamiltonian. Specifically, we must guarantee that decision variables which share an edge in our input graph \(G\) are not assigned to the same qubit under our embedding \(F\)
In [1] this is accomplished by finding a coloring of the graph G such that no vertices with the same color share an edge, and then assigning variables to the same qubit only if they have the same color.
Quantum Rounding Schemes#
Because the final solution we obtain for the relaxed problem \(\rho_\text{relax}\) is unlikely to be in the image of \(F\), we need a strategy for mapping \(\rho_\text{relax}\) to the image of \(F\) so that we may extract a solution to our original problem.
In [1] there are two strategies proposed for rounding \(\rho_\text{relax}\) back to \(m \in \{-1,1\}^M\).
Semi-deterministic Rounding#
A natural choice for extracting a solution is to use the results of Table \(2\) and simply estimate \(\text{Tr}(P_{[i]}\rho_\text{relax})\) for all \(i\) in order to assign a value to each variable \(m_i\). The procedure described in Table \(2\) was intended for use on states in the image of \(F\), however, we are now applying it to arbitrary input states. The practical consequence is we will no longer measure a value close to {\(\pm 1\)}, {\(\pm \sqrt{2}\)}, or {\(\pm \sqrt{3}\)}, as we would expect for the \((1,1,1)\), \((2,1,p)\), and \((3,1,p)\) QRACs, respectively.
We handle this by returning the sign of the expectation value, leading to the following rounding scheme.
Where \(X\) is a random variable which returns either -1 or 1 with equal probability.
Notice that semi-deterministic rounding will faithfully recover \(m\) from \(F(m)\) with a failure probability that decreases exponentially with the number of shots used to estimate each \(\text{Tr}(P_{[i]}\rho_\text{relax})\)
Magic State Rounding#
Rather than seeking to independently distinguish each \(m_i\), magic state rounding randomly selects a measurement basis which will perfectly distinguish a particular pair of orthogonal QRAC states \(\{ F(m), F(\bar m)\}\), where \(\bar m\) indicates that every bit of \(m\) has been flipped.
Let \(\mathcal{M}\) be the randomized rounding procedure which takes as input a state \(\rho_\text{relax}\) and samples a bitstring \(m\) by measuring in a randomly selected magic-basis.
First, notice that for the \((1,1,1)\)-QRAC, there is only one basis to choose and the magic state rounding scheme is essentially equivalent to the semi-deterministic rounding scheme.
For the \((2,1,p)\) and \((3,1,p)\) QRACs, if we apply the magic state rounding scheme to an \(n\)-qubit QRAC state \(F(m)\), we will have a \(2^{-n}\) and \(4^{-n}\) probability of picking the correct basis on each qubit to perfectly extract the solution \(m\). Put differently, if we are given an unknown state \(F(m)\) the probability that \(\mathcal{M}^{\otimes n}(F(m))\mapsto F(m)\) decreases exponentially with the number of qubits measured - it is far more likely to be mapped to some other \(F(m^*)\). Similarly, when we perform magic rounding on an arbitrary state \(\rho_\text{relax}\), we have similarly low odds of randomly choosing the optimal magic basis for all \(n\)-qubits. Fortunately magic state rounding does offer a lower bound on the approximation ratio under certain conditions.
Let \(F(m^*)\) be the highest energy state in the image of F, and let \(\rho^*\) be the maximal eigenstate of H.
References#
[1] Bryce Fuller et al., “Approximate solutions of combinatorial problems via quantum relaxations,” (2021), arXiv:2111.03167,
[2] Stephen Wiesner, “Conjugate coding,” SIGACT News, vol. 15, issue 1, pp. 78-88, 1983. link
[3] Masahito Hayashi et al., “(4,1)-Quantum random access coding does not exist—one qubit is not enough to recover one of four bits,” New Journal of Physics, vol. 8, number 8, pp. 129, 2006. link