APS Logo

Mitigating realistic noise in practical noisy intermediate-scale quantum devices

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum error mitigation (QEM) is vital for noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) devices. While most conventional QEM schemes assume discrete gate-based circuits with noise appearing either before or after each gate, the assumptions are inappropriate for describing realistic noise that may have strong gate-dependence and complicated nonlocal effects, and general computing models such as analog quantum simulators. To address these challenges, we first extend the scenario, where each computation process, being either digital or analog, is described by a continuous time evolution. For noise from imperfections of the engineered Hamiltonian or additional noise operators, we show it can be effectively suppressed by a novel stochastic QEM method. Since our method only assumes accurate single qubit controls, it is applicable to all digital quantum computers and various analog simulators. Meanwhile, errors in the mitigation procedure can be suppressed by leveraging the Richardson extrapolation method. As we numerically test our method with various Hamiltonians under energy relaxation and dephasing noise and digital quantum circuits with additional two-qubit crosstalk, we show an improvement of simulation accuracy by two orders.

Presenters

  • Suguru Endo

    NTT Corporation

Authors

  • Suguru Endo

    NTT Corporation

  • jinzhao sun

    Clarendon Laboratory, University of Oxford

  • Takahiro Tsunoda

    University of Oxford, Clarendon Laboratory, University of Oxford

  • Vlatko Vedral

    Clarendon Laboratory, University of Oxford

  • Simon Charles Benjamin

    University of Oxford, Department of Materials, University of Oxford

  • Xiao Yuan

    Stanford Institute for Theoretical Physics, Stanford University