Learning-based quantum error mitigation
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2005.07601v2
- Date: Mon, 22 Mar 2021 12:12:55 GMT
- Title: Learning-based quantum error mitigation
- Authors: Armands Strikis, Dayue Qin, Yanzhu Chen, Simon C. Benjamin, Ying Li
- Abstract summary: NISQ-era quantum computers will need to employ powerful error mitigation techniques.
We present a method by which the proper compensation strategy can be learned ab initio.
We demonstrate the power of the technique both with real quantum hardware (IBM devices) and exactly-emulated imperfect quantum computers.
- Score: 3.615369748154691
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: If NISQ-era quantum computers are to perform useful tasks, they will need to
employ powerful error mitigation techniques. Quasi-probability methods can
permit perfect error compensation at the cost of additional circuit executions,
provided that the nature of the error model is fully understood and
sufficiently local both spatially and temporally. Unfortunately these
conditions are challenging to satisfy. Here we present a method by which the
proper compensation strategy can instead be learned ab initio. Our training
process uses multiple variants of the primary circuit where all non-Clifford
gates are substituted with gates that are efficient to simulate classically.
The process yields a configuration that is near-optimal versus noise in the
real system with its non-Clifford gate set. Having presented a range of
learning strategies, we demonstrate the power of the technique both with real
quantum hardware (IBM devices) and exactly-emulated imperfect quantum
computers. The systems suffer a range of noise severities and types, including
spatially and temporally correlated variants. In all cases the protocol
successfully adapts to the noise and mitigates it to a high degree.
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