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Machine Learning for Continuous Quantum Error Correction on Superconducting Qubits

ORAL

Abstract

We propose a machine learning algorithm for continuous quantum error correction that is based on the use of a recurrent neural network to identity bit-flip errors from continuous noisy syndrome measurements. The algorithm is designed to operate on measurement signals deviating from the ideal behavior in which the mean value corresponds to a code syndrome value and the measurement has white noise. We analyze continuous measurements taken from a superconducting architecture using three transmon qubits to identify three significant practical examples of non-ideal behavior, namely auto-correlation at temporal short lags, transient syndrome dynamics after each bit-flip, and drift in the steady-state syndrome values over the course of many experiments. Based on these real-world imperfections, we generate synthetic measurement signals from which to train the recurrent neural network, and then test its proficiency when implementing active error correction, comparing this with a traditional double threshold scheme and a discrete Bayesian classifier. The results show that our machine learning protocol is able to outperform the double threshold protocol across all tests, achieving a final state fidelity comparable to the discrete Bayesian classifier.

Presenters

  • Haoran Liao

    University of California, Berkeley

Authors

  • Haoran Liao

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Ian Convy

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Birgitta Whaley

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Song Zhang

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Sahil Patel

    University of California, Berkeley

  • William P Livingston

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Irfan Siddiqi

    University of California, Berkeley, Applied Mathematics and Computational Research and Materials Sciences Divisions, LBNL, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Applied Mathematics, Computational Research and Materials Sciences Divisions, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab

  • Nam Nguyen

    University of California, Berkeley