Quantum phase estimation with noisy qubits

ORAL

Abstract

We study how well small noisy quantum phase estimation circuits can estimate the ground-state energy of a Hamiltonian given an input 'starting' state with some overlap with the ground-state. We describe how one can estimate the ground-state energy from a series of quantum phase estimation experiments by an optimized and computationally feasible Bayesian analysis which includes a scalable modeling of the noise. We focus on quantum phase estimation experiments which consist of multiple rounds, each round coupling to a single ancilla qubit, which gradually project the input state onto a single eigenstate. To demonstrate the robustness and accuracy of our protocol, we numerically assess its performance for a few qubits, randomly picked Hamiltonians and starting states, on a simulation of superconducting quantum computing hardware. We show that the estimate of the ground-state energy and the classically-calculated variance of the posterior distribution of ground-state energies captures the uncertainty in learning the ground-state energy well.

*This research was funded by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO/OCW), and an ERC Synergy Grant.

Presenters

  • Thomas O'Brien

    • Lorentz Institute
    • Physics, Universiteit Leiden

Authors

  • Thomas O'Brien

    • Lorentz Institute
    • Physics, Universiteit Leiden
  • Barbara Terhal

    • JARA Institute for Quantum Information, RWTH Aachen University
    • QuTech
    • TU Delft