38 research outputs found
Entanglement and spin squeezing in non-Hermitian phase transitions
We show that non-Hermitian dynamics generate substantial entanglement in
many-body systems. We consider the non-Hermitian Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model and
show that its phase transition occurs with maximum multiparticle entanglement:
there is full N-particle entanglement at the transition, in contrast to the
Hermitian case. The non-Hermitian model also exhibits more spin squeezing than
the Hermitian model, showing that non-Hermitian dynamics are useful for quantum
metrology. Experimental implementations with trapped ions and cavity QED are
discussed.Comment: 5 pages + appendi
Steady state entanglement of two superconducting qubits engineered by dissipation
We present a scheme for the dissipative preparation of an entangled steady
state of two superconducting qubits in a circuit QED setup. Combining resonator
photon loss, a dissipative process already present in the setup, with an
effective two-photon microwave drive, we engineer an effective decay mechanism
which prepares a maximally entangled state of the two qubits. This state is
then maintained as the steady state of the driven, dissipative evolution. The
performance of the dissipative state preparation protocol is studied
analytically and verified numerically. In view of the experimental
implementation of the presented scheme we investigate the effects of potential
experimental imperfections and show that our scheme is robust to small
deviations in the parameters. We find that high fidelities with the target
state can be achieved both with state-of-the-art 3D, as well as with the more
commonly used 2D transmons. The promising results of our study thus open a
route for the demonstration of an entangled steady state in circuit QED.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures; close to published versio
Effective operator formalism for open quantum systems
We present an effective operator formalism for open quantum systems.
Employing perturbation theory and adiabatic elimination of excited states for a
weakly driven system, we derive an effective master equation which reduces the
evolution to the ground-state dynamics. The effective evolution involves a
single effective Hamiltonian and one effective Lindblad operator for each
naturally occurring decay process. Simple expressions are derived for the
effective operators which can be directly applied to reach effective equations
of motion for the ground states. We compare our method with the hitherto
existing concepts for effective interactions and present physical examples for
the application of our formalism, including dissipative state preparation by
engineered decay processes.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Photon Scattering from a System of Multi-Level Quantum Emitters. I. Formalism
We introduce a formalism to solve the problem of photon scattering from a
system of multi-level quantum emitters. Our approach provides a direct solution
of the scattering dynamics. As such the formalism gives the scattered fields
amplitudes in the limit of a weak incident intensity. Our formalism is equipped
to treat both multi-emitter and multi-level emitter systems, and is applicable
to a plethora of photon scattering problems including conditional state
preparation by photo-detection. In this paper, we develop the general formalism
for an arbitrary geometry. In the following paper (part II), we reduce the
general photon scattering formalism to a form that is applicable to
-dimensional waveguides, and show its applicability by considering explicit
examples with various emitter configurations.Comment: This is first part of a two part series of papers. It has 11 pages,
double column, and one figur
Characterization of Coherent Errors in Noisy Quantum Devices
Characterization of quantum devices generates insights into their sources of
disturbances. State-of-the-art characterization protocols often focus on
incoherent noise and eliminate coherent errors when using Pauli or Clifford
twirling techniques. This approach biases the structure of the effective noise
and adds a circuit and sampling overhead. We motivate the extension of an
incoherent local Pauli noise model to coherent errors and present a practical
characterization protocol for an arbitrary gate layer. We demonstrate our
protocol on a superconducting hardware platform and identify the leading
coherent errors. To verify the characterized noise structure, we mitigate its
coherent and incoherent components using a gate-level coherent noise mitigation
scheme in conjunction with probabilistic error cancellation. The proposed
characterization procedure opens up possibilities for device calibration,
hardware development, and improvement of error mitigation and correction
techniques.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Dissipative self-interference and robustness of continuous error-correction to miscalibration
We derive an effective equation of motion within the steady-state subspace of
a large family of Markovian open systems (i.e., Lindbladians) due to
perturbations of their Hamiltonians and system-bath couplings. Under mild and
realistic conditions, competing dissipative processes destructively interfere
without the need for fine-tuning and produce no dissipation within the
steady-state subspace. In quantum error-correction, these effects imply that
continuously error-correcting Lindbladians are robust to calibration errors,
including miscalibrations consisting of operators undetectable by the code. A
similar interference is present in more general systems if one implements a
particular Hamiltonian drive, resulting in a coherent cancellation of
dissipation. On the opposite extreme, we provide a simple implementation of
universal Lindbladian simulation
Deep learning-based quantum algorithms for solving nonlinear partial differential equations
Partial differential equations frequently appear in the natural sciences and
related disciplines. Solving them is often challenging, particularly in high
dimensions, due to the "curse of dimensionality". In this work, we explore the
potential for enhancing a classical deep learning-based method for solving
high-dimensional nonlinear partial differential equations with suitable quantum
subroutines. First, with near-term noisy intermediate-scale quantum computers
in mind, we construct architectures employing variational quantum circuits and
classical neural networks in conjunction. While the hybrid architectures show
equal or worse performance than their fully classical counterparts in
simulations, they may still be of use in very high-dimensional cases or if the
problem is of a quantum mechanical nature. Next, we identify the bottlenecks
imposed by Monte Carlo sampling and the training of the neural networks. We
find that quantum-accelerated Monte Carlo methods offer the potential to speed
up the estimation of the loss function. In addition, we identify and analyse
the trade-offs when using quantum-accelerated Monte Carlo methods to estimate
the gradients with different methods, including a recently developed
backpropagation-free forward gradient method. Finally, we discuss the usage of
a suitable quantum algorithm for accelerating the training of feed-forward
neural networks. Hence, this work provides different avenues with the potential
for polynomial speedups for deep learning-based methods for nonlinear partial
differential equations.Comment: 48 pages, 17 figure
Provable advantages of kernel-based quantum learners and quantum preprocessing based on Grover's algorithm
There is an ongoing effort to find quantum speedups for learning problems.
Recently, [Y. Liu et al., Nat. Phys. , 1013--1017 (2021)] have
proven an exponential speedup for quantum support vector machines by leveraging
the speedup of Shor's algorithm. We expand upon this result and identify a
speedup utilizing Grover's algorithm in the kernel of a support vector machine.
To show the practicality of the kernel structure we apply it to a problem
related to pattern matching, providing a practical yet provable advantage.
Moreover, we show that combining quantum computation in a preprocessing step
with classical methods for classification further improves classifier
performance.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Dissipative self-interference and robustness of continuous error-correction to miscalibration
We derive an effective equation of motion within the steady-state subspace of
a large family of Markovian open systems (i.e., Lindbladians) due to
perturbations of their Hamiltonians and system-bath couplings. Under mild and
realistic conditions, competing dissipative processes destructively interfere
without the need for fine-tuning and produce no dissipation within the
steady-state subspace. In quantum error-correction, these effects imply that
continuously error-correcting Lindbladians are robust to calibration errors,
including miscalibrations consisting of operators undetectable by the code. A
similar interference is present in more general systems if one implements a
particular Hamiltonian drive, resulting in a coherent cancellation of
dissipation. On the opposite extreme, we provide a simple implementation of
universal Lindbladian simulation