Maximal entropy approach for quantum state tomography
ORAL
Abstract
Quantum computation has been growing rapidly in both theory and experiments. The current quantum computing devices are noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) devices, and so approaches to validate quantum processing on these quantum devices are needed. One of the most common ways of validation for an n-qubit quantum system is quantum tomography, which tries to reconstruct a quantum system's density matrix by a complete set of observables. However, the inherent noise in the quantum systems and the intrinsic limitations poses a critical challenge to precisely know the actual measurement operators which make quantum tomography impractical in experiments. Here, we propose an alternative approach to quantum tomography, based on the maximal information entropy, that can predict the values of unknown observables based on the available mean measurement data. This can then be used to reconstruct the density matrix with high fidelity even though the results for some observables are missing. Of additional contexts, a practical approach to the inference of the quantum mechanical state using only partial information is also needed.
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Presenters
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Rishabh Gupta
Purdue University
Authors
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Rishabh Gupta
Purdue University
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Rongxin Xia
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Purdue University, Purdue University
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Raphael Levine
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, Los Angeles
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Sabre Kais
Purdue University, Department of Chemistry and Purdue Quantum Science and Engineering Institute, Purdue University, Department of Chemistry, Department of Physics and Astronomy, and Purdue Quantum Science and Engineering Institute, Purdue University, Department of Chemistry, Purdue University