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Experimental single-setting quantum state tomography

Authors :
Stricker, Roman
Meth, Michael
Postler, Lukas
Edmunds, Claire
Ferrie, Chris
Blatt, Rainer
Schindler, Philipp
Monz, Thomas
Kueng, Richard
Ringbauer, Martin
Source :
PRX Quantum 3, 040310 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Quantum computers solve ever more complex tasks using steadily growing system sizes. Characterizing these quantum systems is vital, yet becoming increasingly challenging. The gold-standard is quantum state tomography (QST), capable of fully reconstructing a quantum state without prior knowledge. Measurement and classical computing costs, however, increase exponentially in the system size - a bottleneck given the scale of existing and near-term quantum devices. Here, we demonstrate a scalable and practical QST approach that uses a single measurement setting, namely symmetric informationally complete (SIC) positive operator-valued measures (POVM). We implement these nonorthogonal measurements on an ion trap device by utilizing more energy levels in each ion - without ancilla qubits. More precisely, we locally map the SIC POVM to orthogonal states embedded in a higher-dimensional system, which we read out using repeated in-sequence detections, providing full tomographic information in every shot. Combining this SIC tomography with the recently developed randomized measurement toolbox ("classical shadows") proves to be a powerful combination. SIC tomography alleviates the need for choosing measurement settings at random ("derandomization"), while classical shadows enable the estimation of arbitrary polynomial functions of the density matrix orders of magnitudes faster than standard methods. The latter enables in-depth entanglement studies, which we experimentally showcase on a 5-qubit absolutely maximally entangled (AME) state. Moreover, the fact that the full tomography information is available in every shot enables online QST in real time. We demonstrate this on an 8-qubit entangled state, as well as for fast state identification. All in all, these features single out SIC-based classical shadow estimation as a highly scalable and convenient tool for quantum state characterization.<br />Comment: 34 pages, 15 figures

Subjects

Subjects :
Quantum Physics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
PRX Quantum 3, 040310 (2022)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2206.00019
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PRXQuantum.3.040310