Deterministic Realization of Classical Dissipation on Quantum Computers
Preprint, 2026

Lattice Boltzmann (LB) on quantum devices must reconcile unitary gate evolution with the dissipative collision step. In the multiple-relaxation-time (MRT) class, we work in the common setting of modewise diagonal moment relaxation, δm_r' = λ_r δm_r with λ_r ∈ [−1, 1] (overrelaxation if λ_r < 0). Embedding that contraction in a unitary by block encoding or a linear combination of unitaries (LCU) typically yields subunitary success probability that decays multiplicatively across modes, sites, and time, a key bottleneck for quantum LB. For the dissipative MRT block alone, we give a block-encoding-free construction: a signed two-rail population encoding, then a completely positive trace-preserving (CPTP) map (per-rail amplitude damping with survival |λ_r| and, if λ_r < 0, a rail SWAP) so that, after the decode, the map agrees with classical MRT relaxation exactly (expectations of the rail number operators, common encoding–decode scale). Trace preservation gives success probability 1 for that substage. The main result is the dissipative MRT block; construction of the equilibrium moment vector m_eq = M f_eq (prescribed f_eq, host moment matrix M; notation as in Section ???), moment transforms, streaming, and boundaries are composed with it as in a standard host pipeline and lie outside the scope of the formal theorem. Hybrid and fully coherent encodings, adaptive scales, Carleman-based context, and a one-rail no-go in the same nonnegative population framework are in the main text. Audits of the open-channel map on a long LBM collide-stream simulation and on stencil-free inputs both match the target to machine precision.

Author

Muhammad Idrees Khan

University of Rome Tor Vergata

Sauro Succi

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

Harvard University

Huadong Yao

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Marine Technology

3D Virtual Platform for Digitalization of Holistic Acoustic Environment in Cabs of Heavy-Duty Vehicles (OCTAVE)

Swedish Energy Agency (P2024-01011), 2024-10-01 -- 2027-09-30.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Computer Sciences

Fluid Mechanics

Computational Mathematics

Other Computer and Information Science

DOI

10.48550/arXiv.2604.25429

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Latest update

5/5/2026 1