1. Turbulent Mixing Simulation via a Quantum Algorithm
- Author
-
Rolando D. Somma, Guanglei Xu, Peyman Givi, and Andrew J. Daley
- Subjects
Physics ,Turbulence ,Monte Carlo method ,Aerospace Engineering ,Dirac delta function ,Probability density function ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,symbols.namesake ,0103 physical sciences ,symbols ,Mathematics::Metric Geometry ,Quantum algorithm ,Statistical physics ,010306 general physics ,Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations ,QC ,Large eddy simulation ,Quantum computer - Abstract
Probability density function (PDF) methods have been very useful in describing many physical aspects of turbulent mixing. In applications of these methods, modeled PDF transport equations are commonly simulated via classical Monte Carlo techniques, which provide estimates of moments of the PDF at arbitrary accuracy. In this work, recently developed techniques in quantum computing and quantum enhanced measurements (quantum metrology) are used to construct a quantum algorithm that accelerates the computation of such estimates. This quantum algorithm provides a quadratic speedup over classical Monte Carlo methods in terms of the number of repetitions needed to achieve the desired precision. This paper illustrates the power of this algorithm by considering a binary scalar mixing process modeled by means of the coalescence/dispersion (C/D) closure. The equation is first simulated using classical Monte Carlo methods, where error estimates for the computation of central moments are provided. Then the quantum algorithm for this problem is simulated by sampling from the same probability distribution as that of the output of a quantum computer, and it is shown that significantly fewer resources are required to achieve the same precision. The results demonstrate potential applications of future quantum computers for simulation of turbulent mixing, and large classes of related problems.
- Published
- 2018