Mitigating Crosstalk on Quantum Computers via Digital Precompilation
ORAL
Abstract
Crosstalk errors have been a bane for experimentalists designing quantum computers for more than a decade. Fast two-qubit gates require spatially or spectrally nearby qubits, but such qubits are intrinsically more difficult to address individually. During this talk, we describe a scalable framework for modeling crosstalk effects on quantum information processors. We show how to apply optimal control techniques to tune up arbitrary high-fidelity parallel operations with substantial local and nonlocal crosstalk. We report on experimental data that validates the practicability of our work. These results show that instead of engineering away undesirable interactions during fabrication, chip designers should focus on removing other sources of errors and mitigate such effects with software through careful characterization and control optimization.
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Publication: https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.230502
Presenters
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Adam Winick
University of Waterloo
Authors
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Adam Winick
University of Waterloo
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Jan Balewski
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Gang Huang
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Yilun Xu
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Joel Wallman
Keysight Technologies Canada, Kanata, ON K2K 2W5, Canada, University of Waterloo
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Joseph V Emerson
Perimeter Inst for Theo Phys