In chaotic dynamical systems, extreme events manifest in time series as unpredictable large-amplitude peaks. Although deterministic, extreme events appear seemingly randomly, which makes their forecasting difficult. By learning the dynamics from observables (data), reservoir computers can time accurately predict extreme events and chaotic dynamics, but they may require many degrees of freedom (large reservoirs). In this paper, by exploiting quantum-computer ansätze and entanglement, we design reservoir computers with compact reservoirs and accurate prediction capabilities. First, we propose the recurrence-free quantum reservoir computer (RFQRC) architecture. By developing ad hoc quantum feature maps and removing recurrent connections, the RFQRC has quantum circuits with smaller depths. This allows the RF-QRC to scale well with higher-dimensional chaotic systems, which makes it suitable for hardware implementation. Second, we forecast the temporal chaotic dynamics and their long-term statistics of low- and higher-dimensional dynamical systems. We find that RFQRC requires smaller reservoirs than classical reservoir computers for higher-dimensional systems and the same predictability. Third, we apply the RF-QRC to the time prediction of extreme events in a model of a turbulent shear flow with turbulent bursts. We find that the RF-QRC has longer predictability than the classical reservoir computer for extreme events forecasting. The results and analyses indicate that quantum-computer ansätze offers nonlinear expressivity and computational scalability, which are useful for forecasting chaotic dynamics and extreme events. This work opens new opportunities for using quantum machine learning on near-term quantum computers.
Prediction of chaotic dynamics and extreme events: A recurrence-free quantum reservoir computing approach / Ahmed, Osama; Tennie, Felix; Magri, Luca. - In: PHYSICAL REVIEW RESEARCH. - ISSN 2643-1564. - 6:4(2024), pp. 1-19. [10.1103/PhysRevResearch.6.043082]
Prediction of chaotic dynamics and extreme events: A recurrence-free quantum reservoir computing approach
Magri Luca
2024
Abstract
In chaotic dynamical systems, extreme events manifest in time series as unpredictable large-amplitude peaks. Although deterministic, extreme events appear seemingly randomly, which makes their forecasting difficult. By learning the dynamics from observables (data), reservoir computers can time accurately predict extreme events and chaotic dynamics, but they may require many degrees of freedom (large reservoirs). In this paper, by exploiting quantum-computer ansätze and entanglement, we design reservoir computers with compact reservoirs and accurate prediction capabilities. First, we propose the recurrence-free quantum reservoir computer (RFQRC) architecture. By developing ad hoc quantum feature maps and removing recurrent connections, the RFQRC has quantum circuits with smaller depths. This allows the RF-QRC to scale well with higher-dimensional chaotic systems, which makes it suitable for hardware implementation. Second, we forecast the temporal chaotic dynamics and their long-term statistics of low- and higher-dimensional dynamical systems. We find that RFQRC requires smaller reservoirs than classical reservoir computers for higher-dimensional systems and the same predictability. Third, we apply the RF-QRC to the time prediction of extreme events in a model of a turbulent shear flow with turbulent bursts. We find that the RF-QRC has longer predictability than the classical reservoir computer for extreme events forecasting. The results and analyses indicate that quantum-computer ansätze offers nonlinear expressivity and computational scalability, which are useful for forecasting chaotic dynamics and extreme events. This work opens new opportunities for using quantum machine learning on near-term quantum computers.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
PhysRevResearch.6.043082.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipologia:
2a Post-print versione editoriale / Version of Record
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
7 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
7 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2995089