When states can create gates, quantum process tomography becomes quantum state tomography

ORAL

Abstract

Lloyd, Mohseni, and Rebenstrost devised a way to simulate Hamiltonian evolution when the Hamiltonian is given by the density matrix of a state, and the experimenter is given access to copies of the state [Nat. Phys., 10(9):631–633, 2014]. When the state is unknown, this produces an unknown evolution. Existing quantum process tomography techniques can characterize this evolution, which in turn can characterize properties of the unknown state. Thus we can use quantum process tomography to perform state tomography. We examine advantages and disadvantages of applying Hamiltonian learning [PRL, 112.19 (2014): 190501] to the task of state tomography using this approach.

*CG funded by Army Research Office grant numbers W911NF-14-1-0098 and W911NF-14-1-0103, and by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems

Authors

  • Shelby Kimmel

    • University of Maryland
  • Christopher Granade

    • University of Sydney
  • Nathan Wiebe

    • Microsoft Research