Quantum bootstrapping via compressed quantum Hamiltonian learning

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Publication:3387622

DOI10.1088/1367-2630/17/2/022005zbMATH Open1452.68162arXiv1409.1524OpenAlexW2075236172MaRDI QIDQ3387622FDOQ3387622


Authors: Nathan Wiebe, Christopher E. Granade, David G. Cory Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 13 January 2021

Published in: New Journal of Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: Recent work has shown that quantum simulation is a valuable tool for learning empirical models for quantum systems. We build upon these results by showing that a small quantum simulators can be used to characterize and learn control models for larger devices for wide classes of physically realistic Hamiltonians. This leads to a new application for small quantum computers: characterizing and controlling larger quantum computers. Our protocol achieves this by using Bayesian inference in concert with Lieb-Robinson bounds and interactive quantum learning methods to achieve compressed simulations for characterization. Whereas Fisher information analysis shows that current methods which employ short-time evolution are suboptimal, interactive quantum learning allows us to overcome this limitation. We illustrate the efficiency of our bootstrapping protocol by showing numerically that an 8-qubit Ising model simulator can be used to calibrate and control a 50 qubit Ising simulator while using only about 750 kilobits of experimental data.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1409.1524




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