Fundamental limits of quantum error mitigation
ORAL
Abstract
The inevitable accumulation of errors in near-future quantum devices represents a key obstacle in delivering practical quantum advantage. This motivated the development of various quantum error-mitigation protocols, each representing a method to extract useful computational output by combining measurement data from multiple samplings of the available imperfect quantum device. What are the ultimate performance limits universally imposed on such protocols? In this talk, we present a fundamental bound on the sampling overhead that applies to a general class of error-mitigation protocols, assuming only the laws of quantum mechanics. We discuss its immediate consequences, including (1) the sampling overhead to mitigate local depolarizing noise for layered circuits --- such as the ones used for variational quantum algorithms --- must scale exponentially with circuit depth, and (2) the optimality of probabilistic error cancellation method among all strategies in mitigating a certain class of noise, demonstrating that our results provide a means to identify when a given quantum error-mitigation strategy is optimal and when there is potential room for improvement.
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Publication: Takagi, Ryuji, Suguru Endo, Shintaro Minagawa, and Mile Gu. "Fundamental limitations of quantum error mitigation." arXiv:2109.04457 (2021).
Presenters
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Ryuji Takagi
Nanyang Technological University
Authors
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Mile Gu
Nanyang Technological University
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Ryuji Takagi
Nanyang Technological University
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Suguru Endo
NTT Corporation, NTT Computer and Data Science Laboratories, NTT Corporation
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Shintaro Minagawa
Nagoya University