Practical and reliable error bars for quantum process tomography

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

P.T. Thinh (TU Delft - QuTech Advanced Research Centre, TU Delft - QID/Wehner Group, National University of Singapore)

Philippe Faist (California Institute of Technology)

J. Helsen (TU Delft - Quantum Information and Software, TU Delft - QuTech Advanced Research Centre)

David Elkouss (TU Delft - QuTech Advanced Research Centre, TU Delft - Quantum Information and Software)

Stephanie Wehner (TU Delft - QuTech Advanced Research Centre, TU Delft - Quantum Internet Division, TU Delft - Quantum Information and Software)

Research Institute
QuTech Advanced Research Centre
Copyright
© 2019 P.T. Lê, Philippe Faist, J. Helsen, D. Elkouss Coronas, S.D.C. Wehner
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.99.052311
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 P.T. Lê, Philippe Faist, J. Helsen, D. Elkouss Coronas, S.D.C. Wehner
Research Institute
QuTech Advanced Research Centre
Issue number
5
Volume number
99
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Abstract

Current techniques in quantum process tomography typically return a single point estimate of an unknown process based on a finite albeit large amount of measurement data. Due to statistical fluctuations, however, other processes close to the point estimate can also produce the observed data with near certainty. Unless appropriate error bars can be constructed, the point estimate does not carry any sound operational interpretation. Here, we provide a solution to this problem by constructing a confidence region estimator for quantum processes. Our method enables reliable estimation of essentially any figure of merit for quantum processes on few qubits, including the diamond distance to a specific noise model, the entanglement fidelity, and the worst-case entanglement fidelity, by identifying error regions which contain the true state with high probability. We also provide a software package, QPtomographer, implementing our estimator for the diamond norm and the worst-case entanglement fidelity. We illustrate its usage and performance with several simulated examples. Our tools can be used to reliably certify the performance of, e.g., error correction codes, implementations of unitary gates, or more generally any noise process affecting a quantum system.

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