Different Paths, Same Destination: Designing New Physics-Inspired Dynamical Systems with Engineered Stability to Minimize the Ising Hamiltonian
By: E. M. H. E. B. Ekanayake, N. Shukla
Potential Business Impact:
Solves hard puzzles better by trying different ways.
Oscillator Ising machines (OIMs) represent an exemplar case of using physics-inspired non-linear dynamical systems to solve computationally challenging combinatorial optimization problems (COPs). The computational performance of such systems is highly sensitive to the underlying dynamical properties, the topology of the input graph, and their relative compatibility. In this work, we explore the concept of designing different dynamical systems that minimize the same objective function but exhibit drastically different dynamical properties. Our goal is to leverage this diversification in dynamics to reduce the sensitivity of the computational performance to the underlying graph, and subsequently, enhance the overall effectiveness of such physics-based computational methods. To this end, we introduce a novel dynamical system, the Dynamical Ising Machine (DIM), which, like the OIM, minimizes the Ising Hamiltonian but offers significantly different dynamical properties. We analyze the characteristic properties of the DIM and compare them with those of the OIM. We also show that the relative performance of each model is dependent on the input graph. Our work illustrates that using multiple dynamical systems with varying properties to solve the same COP enables an effective method that is less sensitive to the input graph, while producing robust solutions.
Similar Papers
General Oscillator-Based Ising Machine Models with Phase-Amplitude Dynamics and Polynomial Interactions
Emerging Technologies
Solves hard problems faster using special computer chips.
Learning at the Speed of Physics: Equilibrium Propagation on Oscillator Ising Machines
Machine Learning (CS)
Computers learn faster by copying how nature works.
How to Incorporate External Fields in Analog Ising Machines
Statistical Mechanics
Makes special computers solve hard puzzles faster.