Estimating the Density of States of Frustrated Spin Systems
arXiv:1808.04340 · doi:10.1088/1367-2630/ab2e39
The paper introduces a sampling method that combines population annealing with multi‑histogram analysis to more reliably estimate the density of states in frustrated spin systems, demonstrating improved performance over existing entropic samplers for spin glasses and related benchmarks.
Abstract
Estimating the density of states of systems with rugged free energy landscapes is a notoriously difficult task of the utmost importance in many areas of physics ranging from spin glasses to biopolymers. Density of states estimation has also recently become an indispensable tool for the benchmarking of quantum annealers when these function as samplers. Some of the standard approaches suffer from a spurious convergence of the estimates to metastable minima, and these cases are particularly hard to detect. Here, we introduce a sampling technique based on population annealing enhanced with a multi-histogram analysis and report on its performance for spin glasses. We demonstrate its ability to overcome the pitfalls of other entropic samplers, resulting in some cases in large scaling advantages that can lead to the uncovering of new physics. The new technique avoids some inherent difficulties in established approaches and can be applied to a wide range of systems without relevant tailoring requirements. Benchmarking of the studied techniques is facilitated by the introduction of several schemes that allow us to achieve exact counts of the degeneracies of the tested instances.
32 pages, 11 figures, 1 table