Fast Quantum Calibration using Bayesian Optimization with State
Parameter Estimator for Non-Markovian Environment
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2205.12929v1
- Date: Wed, 25 May 2022 17:31:15 GMT
- Title: Fast Quantum Calibration using Bayesian Optimization with State
Parameter Estimator for Non-Markovian Environment
- Authors: Peng Qian, Shahid Qamar, Xiao Xiao, Yanwu Gu, Xudan Chai, Zhen Zhao,
Nicolo Forcellini, Dong E. Liu
- Abstract summary: We propose a real-time optimal estimator of qubit states, which utilizes weak measurements and Bayesian optimization to find the optimal control pulses for gate design.
Our numerical results demonstrate a significant reduction in the calibration process, obtaining a high gate fidelity.
- Score: 11.710177724383954
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: As quantum systems expand in size and complexity, manual qubit
characterization and gate optimization will be a non-scalable and
time-consuming venture. Physical qubits have to be carefully calibrated because
quantum processors are very sensitive to the external environment, with control
hardware parameters slowly drifting during operation, affecting gate fidelity.
Currently, existing calibration techniques require complex and lengthy
measurements to independently control the different parameters of each gate and
are unscalable to large quantum systems. Therefore, fully automated protocols
with the desired functionalities are required to speed up the calibration
process. This paper aims to propose single-qubit calibration of superconducting
qubits under continuous weak measurements from a real physical experimental
settings point of view. We propose a real-time optimal estimator of qubit
states, which utilizes weak measurements and Bayesian optimization to find the
optimal control pulses for gate design. Our numerical results demonstrate a
significant reduction in the calibration process, obtaining a high gate
fidelity. Using the proposed estimator we estimated the qubit state with and
without measurement noise and the estimation error between the qubit state and
the estimator state is less than 0.02. With this setup, we drive an
approximated pi pulse with final fidelity of 0.9928. This shows that our
proposed strategy is robust against the presence of measurement and
environmental noise and can also be applicable for the calibration of many
other quantum computation technologies.
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