TimeStitch: Exploiting Slack to Mitigate Decoherence in Quantum Circuits
ORAL
Abstract
The coupling of qubits to their environment causes decoherence, adding significant noise to computation; thus, methods for combatting decoherence are needed to increase the performance of quantum algorithms on near-term machines. While many forms of error mitigation rely on adding extra gates to a circuit, calibrating new gates, or extending a circuit's runtime, this work leverages the gates already present in quantum programs. We exploit circuit slack, a common feature in compiled quantum circuits, and schedule single-qubit gates to counteract some errors.
Theory fails to capture all noise sources in NISQ devices, requiring practical solutions that better minimize unpredictable errors. Here, we present a technique that leverages quantum reversibility with novel slice-inverse tuning to pinpoint the optimum execution of single-qubit gates within circuits. When slack optimization is implemented as a compilation pass, quantum circuits on real machines experience fidelity boosts without violating critical path frontiers in the slack tuning procedures or in the final rescheduled circuit.
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Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2105.01760
Presenters
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Kaitlin N Smith
University of Chicago
Authors
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Kaitlin N Smith
University of Chicago
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Gokul Subramanian Ravi
University of Chicago
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Prakash Murali
Princeton University
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Jonathan M Baker
University of Chicago
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Nathan Earnest
IBM, IBM Quantum, NY, IBM Quantum
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Ali Javadi-Abhari
IBM, IBM Quantum, IBM Quantum, T. J. Watson Research Center
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Frederic T Chong
University of Chicago, University of Chicago, Super.tech