Control of noisy quantum systems: Field theory approach to error mitigation
Rafael Hipolito, Paul M. Goldbart

TL;DR
This paper develops a field theory approach using the Martin-Siggia-Rose and Schwinger-Keldysh formalisms to optimize quantum control fields for error mitigation in noisy quantum systems, applicable across different system sizes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel MSR-SK path integral framework for quantum control under noise, enabling optimal error mitigation with constraints and applicable to systems of arbitrary size.
Findings
Optimal control protocol is universal across all spin sizes.
The approach effectively mitigates 1/f noise in quantum systems.
Framework can be extended to complex quantum control scenarios.
Abstract
We consider the quantum-control task of obtaining a target unitary operation via control fields that couple to the quantum system and are chosen to best mitigate errors resulting from time-dependent noise. We allow for two sources of noise: fluctuations in the control fields and those arising from the environment. We address the issue of error mitigation by means of a formulation rooted in the Martin-Siggia-Rose (MSR) approach to noisy, classical statistical-mechanical systems. We express the noisy control problem in terms of a path integral, and integrate out the noise to arrive at an effective, noise-free description. We characterize the degree of success in error mitigation via a fidelity, which characterizes the proximity of the sought-after evolution to ones achievable in the presence of noise. Error mitigation is then accomplished by applying the optimal control fields, i.e.,…
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