Exponentially tighter bounds on limitations of quantum error mitigation

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Exponentially tighter bounds on limitations of quantum error mitigation. / Quek, Yihui; Stilck França, Daniel; Khatri, Sumeet; Meyer, Johannes Jakob; Eisert, Jens.

I: Nature Physics, 2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Quek, Y, Stilck França, D, Khatri, S, Meyer, JJ & Eisert, J 2024, 'Exponentially tighter bounds on limitations of quantum error mitigation', Nature Physics. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-024-02536-7

APA

Quek, Y., Stilck França, D., Khatri, S., Meyer, J. J., & Eisert, J. (2024). Exponentially tighter bounds on limitations of quantum error mitigation. Nature Physics. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-024-02536-7

Vancouver

Quek Y, Stilck França D, Khatri S, Meyer JJ, Eisert J. Exponentially tighter bounds on limitations of quantum error mitigation. Nature Physics. 2024. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-024-02536-7

Author

Quek, Yihui ; Stilck França, Daniel ; Khatri, Sumeet ; Meyer, Johannes Jakob ; Eisert, Jens. / Exponentially tighter bounds on limitations of quantum error mitigation. I: Nature Physics. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{8f6653f881f243238dfe99a1fd747412,
title = "Exponentially tighter bounds on limitations of quantum error mitigation",
abstract = "Quantum error mitigation has been proposed as a means to combat unwanted and unavoidable errors in near-term quantum computing without the heavy resource overheads required by fault-tolerant schemes. Recently, error mitigation has been successfully applied to reduce noise in near-term applications. In this work, however, we identify strong limitations to the degree to which quantum noise can be effectively {\textquoteleft}undone{\textquoteright} for larger system sizes. Our framework rigorously captures large classes of error-mitigation schemes in use today. By relating error mitigation to a statistical inference problem, we show that even at shallow circuit depths comparable to those of current experiments, a superpolynomial number of samples is needed in the worst case to estimate the expectation values of noiseless observables, the principal task of error mitigation. Notably, our construction implies that scrambling due to noise can kick in at exponentially smaller depths than previously thought. Noise also impacts other near-term applications by constraining kernel estimation in quantum machine learning, causing an earlier emergence of noise-induced barren plateaus in variational quantum algorithms and ruling out exponential quantum speed-ups in estimating expectation values in the presence of noise or preparing the ground state of a Hamiltonian.",
author = "Yihui Quek and {Stilck Fran{\c c}a}, Daniel and Sumeet Khatri and Meyer, {Johannes Jakob} and Jens Eisert",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2024.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1038/s41567-024-02536-7",
language = "English",
journal = "Nature Physics",
issn = "1745-2473",
publisher = "nature publishing group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Exponentially tighter bounds on limitations of quantum error mitigation

AU - Quek, Yihui

AU - Stilck França, Daniel

AU - Khatri, Sumeet

AU - Meyer, Johannes Jakob

AU - Eisert, Jens

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Quantum error mitigation has been proposed as a means to combat unwanted and unavoidable errors in near-term quantum computing without the heavy resource overheads required by fault-tolerant schemes. Recently, error mitigation has been successfully applied to reduce noise in near-term applications. In this work, however, we identify strong limitations to the degree to which quantum noise can be effectively ‘undone’ for larger system sizes. Our framework rigorously captures large classes of error-mitigation schemes in use today. By relating error mitigation to a statistical inference problem, we show that even at shallow circuit depths comparable to those of current experiments, a superpolynomial number of samples is needed in the worst case to estimate the expectation values of noiseless observables, the principal task of error mitigation. Notably, our construction implies that scrambling due to noise can kick in at exponentially smaller depths than previously thought. Noise also impacts other near-term applications by constraining kernel estimation in quantum machine learning, causing an earlier emergence of noise-induced barren plateaus in variational quantum algorithms and ruling out exponential quantum speed-ups in estimating expectation values in the presence of noise or preparing the ground state of a Hamiltonian.

AB - Quantum error mitigation has been proposed as a means to combat unwanted and unavoidable errors in near-term quantum computing without the heavy resource overheads required by fault-tolerant schemes. Recently, error mitigation has been successfully applied to reduce noise in near-term applications. In this work, however, we identify strong limitations to the degree to which quantum noise can be effectively ‘undone’ for larger system sizes. Our framework rigorously captures large classes of error-mitigation schemes in use today. By relating error mitigation to a statistical inference problem, we show that even at shallow circuit depths comparable to those of current experiments, a superpolynomial number of samples is needed in the worst case to estimate the expectation values of noiseless observables, the principal task of error mitigation. Notably, our construction implies that scrambling due to noise can kick in at exponentially smaller depths than previously thought. Noise also impacts other near-term applications by constraining kernel estimation in quantum machine learning, causing an earlier emergence of noise-induced barren plateaus in variational quantum algorithms and ruling out exponential quantum speed-ups in estimating expectation values in the presence of noise or preparing the ground state of a Hamiltonian.

U2 - 10.1038/s41567-024-02536-7

DO - 10.1038/s41567-024-02536-7

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85199557914

JO - Nature Physics

JF - Nature Physics

SN - 1745-2473

ER -

ID: 402828396