LPQCs are shown to universally approximate distributions over quantum density operators in 1-Wasserstein distance via a hybrid classical-quantum construction, with added multimodal priors and mixture-of-experts architecture that empirically reduces barren plateaus.
Universality of Many-body Projected Ensemble for Learning Quantum Data Distribution
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Generating quantum data by learning the underlying quantum distribution poses challenges in both theoretical and practical scenarios, yet it is a critical task for understanding quantum systems. A fundamental question in quantum machine learning (QML) is the universality of approximation: whether a parameterized QML model can approximate any quantum distribution. We address this question by proving a universality theorem for the Many-body Projected Ensemble (MPE) framework, a method for quantum state design that uses a single many-body wave function to prepare random states. This demonstrates that MPE can approximate any distribution of pure states within a 1-Wasserstein distance error. This theorem provides a rigorous guarantee of universal expressivity, addressing key theoretical gaps in QML. For practicality, we propose an Incremental MPE variant with layer-wise training to improve the trainability. Numerical experiments on clustered quantum states and quantum chemistry datasets validate MPE's efficacy in learning complex quantum data distributions.
fields
quant-ph 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
Latent-Conditioned Parameterized Quantum Circuits as Universal Approximators for Distributions over Quantum States
LPQCs are shown to universally approximate distributions over quantum density operators in 1-Wasserstein distance via a hybrid classical-quantum construction, with added multimodal priors and mixture-of-experts architecture that empirically reduces barren plateaus.