Quantum state tomography with non-instantaneous measurements, imperfections and decoherence
Pierre Six, Philippe Campagne-Ibarcq, Igor Dotsenko, Alain Sarlette,, Benjamin Huard, Pierre Rouchon

TL;DR
This paper extends quantum state tomography to account for non-instantaneous measurements, imperfections, and decoherence, enabling more accurate reconstruction of quantum states from realistic experimental data.
Contribution
It introduces a maximum-likelihood tomography method based on quantum trajectories and smoothing, accommodating continuous-time signals and measurement imperfections.
Findings
Validated on microwave cavity photon data
Successfully reconstructed states from superconducting qubit measurements
Provided confidence intervals for estimated observables
Abstract
Tomography of a quantum state is usually based on positive operator-valued measure (POVM) and on their experimental statistics. Among the available reconstructions, the maximum-likelihood (MaxLike) technique is an efficient one. We propose an extension of this technique when the measurement process cannot be simply described by an instantaneous POVM. Instead, the tomography relies on a set of quantum trajectories and their measurement records. This model includes the fact that, in practice, each measurement could be corrupted by imperfections and decoherence, and could also be associated with the record of continuous-time signals over a finite amount of time. The goal is then to retrieve the quantum state that was present at the start of this measurement process. The proposed extension relies on an explicit expression of the likelihood function via the effective matrices appearing in…
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