Efficient measurement of the time-dependent cavity field through
compressed sensing
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2203.13555v1
- Date: Fri, 25 Mar 2022 10:20:10 GMT
- Title: Efficient measurement of the time-dependent cavity field through
compressed sensing
- Authors: Fang Zhao, Qing Zhao and Dazhi Xu
- Abstract summary: We propose a method based on compressed sensing (CS) to measure the evolution processes of the states of a driven cavity quantum electrodynamics system.
We use largely detuned atoms and control their interactions with the cavity field to modulate coherent state amplitudes according to the scheme encoded in the sensing matrix.
The simulation results show that the CS method efficiently recovers the amplitudes of the coherent cavity field even in the presence of noise.
- Score: 10.506029420934741
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: We propose a method based on compressed sensing (CS) to measure the evolution
processes of the states of a driven cavity quantum electrodynamics system. In
precisely reconstructing the coherent cavity field amplitudes, we have to
prepare the same states repetitively and each time perform one measurement with
short sampling intervals considering the quantum nature of measurement and the
Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem. However, with the help of CS, the number of
measurements can be exponentially reduced without loss of the recovery
accuracy. We use largely detuned atoms and control their interactions with the
cavity field to modulate coherent state amplitudes according to the scheme
encoded in the sensing matrix. The simulation results show that the CS method
efficiently recovers the amplitudes of the coherent cavity field even in the
presence of noise.
Related papers
- Photonic Simulation of Localization Phenomena Using Boson Sampling [0.0]
We propose boson sampling as an alternative compact synthetic platform performing at room temperature.
By mapping the time-evolution unitary of a Hamiltonian onto an interferometer via continuous-variable gate decompositions, we present proof-of-principle results of localization characteristics of a single particle.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-10-17T18:00:05Z) - Importance sampling for stochastic quantum simulations [68.8204255655161]
We introduce the qDrift protocol, which builds random product formulas by sampling from the Hamiltonian according to the coefficients.
We show that the simulation cost can be reduced while achieving the same accuracy, by considering the individual simulation cost during the sampling stage.
Results are confirmed by numerical simulations performed on a lattice nuclear effective field theory.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-12-12T15:06:32Z) - Efficient measurement schemes for bosonic systems [1.4781921087738965]
Boson is one of the most basic particles and preserves the commutation relation.
We numerically test the schemes for measuring nuclei vibrations simulated using a discrete quantum computer.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-10-24T20:14:23Z) - Localization detection based on quantum dynamics [0.0]
This study investigates methods that assume the use of a quantum device to detect disorder-induced localization.
Numerical simulations for small systems demonstrate how the magnetization and twist overlap change from the thermal phase to the localized phase.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-06-18T10:13:28Z) - Probing finite-temperature observables in quantum simulators of spin
systems with short-time dynamics [62.997667081978825]
We show how finite-temperature observables can be obtained with an algorithm motivated from the Jarzynski equality.
We show that a finite temperature phase transition in the long-range transverse field Ising model can be characterized in trapped ion quantum simulators.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-06-03T18:00:02Z) - Numerical Simulations of Noisy Quantum Circuits for Computational
Chemistry [51.827942608832025]
Near-term quantum computers can calculate the ground-state properties of small molecules.
We show how the structure of the computational ansatz as well as the errors induced by device noise affect the calculation.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-12-31T16:33:10Z) - Bosonic field digitization for quantum computers [62.997667081978825]
We address the representation of lattice bosonic fields in a discretized field amplitude basis.
We develop methods to predict error scaling and present efficient qubit implementation strategies.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-08-24T15:30:04Z) - Visualizing spinon Fermi surfaces with time-dependent spectroscopy [62.997667081978825]
We propose applying time-dependent photo-emission spectroscopy, an established tool in solid state systems, in cold atom quantum simulators.
We show in exact diagonalization simulations of the one-dimensional $t-J$ model that the spinons start to populate previously unoccupied states in an effective band structure.
The dependence of the spectral function on the time after the pump pulse reveals collective interactions among spinons.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-05-27T18:00:02Z) - Continuous-time dynamics and error scaling of noisy highly-entangling
quantum circuits [58.720142291102135]
We simulate a noisy quantum Fourier transform processor with up to 21 qubits.
We take into account microscopic dissipative processes rather than relying on digital error models.
We show that depending on the dissipative mechanisms at play, the choice of input state has a strong impact on the performance of the quantum algorithm.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-02-08T14:55:44Z) - Noisy quantum metrology enhanced by continuous nondemolition measurement [0.0]
We numerically simulate the dynamics of an ensemble with up to N = 150 atoms initially prepared in a (classical) spin coherent state.
Thanks to the spin squeezing dynamically generated by the measurement, the information obtainable from the continuous photocurrent scales superclassically.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-06-16T08:06:37Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.