Barren Plateaus as Destructive Interference: A Diagnostic Framework and Implications for Structured Ansatzes

Abstract

Barren plateaus (BPs) are usually described by the exponential suppression of gradient variance, but the mechanism by which gradient signal disappears remains unclear. We show that this phenomenon can be understood as destructive interference among termwise gradient contributions. To make this perspective operational, we introduce a diagnostic framework based on the cancellation ratio Rk, the effective term count Neff,k, and the interference-quality measure Beff,k=RkNeff,k. Under a random-sign model, Beff,k remains near a stable baseline, defining a random-sign cancellation regime. For the transverse-field Ising model (TFIM), we find that the hardware-efficient ansatz (HEA) remains close to this regime across system sizes and depths, whereas the Hamiltonian variational ansatz (HVA) systematically escapes it. In particular, HVA exhibits larger Beff,k not merely because Neff,k is larger, but because Rk also remains systematically larger despite the broader term participation. This pattern indicates improved sign organization rather than simple term suppression. We further establish an exact identity that connects the proposed interference diagnostics directly to the standard variance-based theory of BPs. These results position destructive interference as a mechanistic interpretation of BP-like behavior in the regimes studied here, but they do not imply that BPs and destructive interference are universally interchangeable across all architectures and settings.

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