Experimental implementation and characterization of a virtual two-qubit gate
ORAL
Abstract
Quantum computers seem to be on a promising path to realize the capabilities which could prove to be more fast, secure, and efficient than their classical counterparts. However, the size of current quantum devices, termed as Noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) devices, is strictly limited. The other major challenges faced by NISQ devices are finite noise and limited coherence times. In relation to the limited size issue, several techniques have been proposed to increase the effective size of the devices with additional classical processing costs. One such technique was proposed by K. Mitarai and K. Fujii [New J. Phys. 23 023021 (2021)], which constructs a general two-qubit gate from only single-qubit operations or referred here as a "virtual two-qubit" gate. This virtual two-qubit gate allows us to, for example, simulate the quantum circuit of 2N qubits by using only N physical qubits with sampling overhead when the goal of the quantum circuit is expectation value estimation. Hence, it enables us to expand the computing capabilities of NISQ devices in certain algorithms. In this work, we present the experimental demonstration and characterization of the "virtual CZ" gate. While local operations on each qubit involved in a virtual gate consist of single-qubit gates and measurements, measurement errors are usually much larger than single-qubit gate errors in experiments. Thus, we have also implemented measurement error mitigation to improve virtual gate fidelity. As a result, we experimentally achieved virtual CZ gate with average gate fidelity of 0.9975±0.0028. This technique helps us to obtain expectation values in "scaled-up" quantum circuits, which are used in many quantum algorithms such as variational quantum eigensolver and others.
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Presenters
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Akhil P Singh
The University of Tokyo
Authors
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Akhil P Singh
The University of Tokyo
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Kosuke Mitarai
QIQB, Osaka University; Osaka University; JST PRESTO, Osaka University, QIQB, JST PRESTO, Osaka University, osaka university graduate school of engineering science
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Yasunari Suzuki
CD Lab, NTT Corporation, NTT corporation
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Kentaro Heya
The University of Tokyo
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Yutaka Tabuchi
RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing, RIKEN
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Keisuke Fujii
QIQB, Osaka University; Osaka University; RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing, Osaka University/ RIKEN RQC, Osaka University, QIQB, RIKEN, Osaka University, osaka university graduate school of engineering science
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Yasunobu Nakamura
The University of Tokyo; RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing, Univ of Tokyo, UTokyo