ADAPT: Mitigating Idling Errors in Qubits via Adaptive Dynamical Decoupling
Poulami Das, Swamit Tannu, Siddharth Dangwal, Moinuddin Qureshi

TL;DR
This paper introduces ADAPT, a software framework that adaptively applies dynamical decoupling to mitigate idling errors in qubits, significantly improving quantum application fidelity on real hardware.
Contribution
The paper proposes ADAPT, a novel adaptive method that selectively applies dynamical decoupling to qubits, optimizing fidelity improvements over traditional non-adaptive approaches.
Findings
ADAPT improves fidelity by 1.86x on average.
ADAPT achieves up to 5.73x improvement over no DD.
ADAPT outperforms uniform DD application on IBM quantum devices.
Abstract
The fidelity of applications on near-term quantum computers is limited by hardware errors. In addition to errors that occur during gate and measurement operations, a qubit is susceptible to idling errors, which occur when the qubit is idle and not actively undergoing any operations. To mitigate idling errors, prior works in the quantum devices community have proposed Dynamical Decoupling (DD), that reduces stray noise on idle qubits by continuously executing a specific sequence of single-qubit operations that effectively behave as an identity gate. Unfortunately, existing DD protocols have been primarily studied for individual qubits and their efficacy at the application-level is not yet fully understood. Our experiments show that naively enabling DD for every idle qubit does not necessarily improve fidelity. While DD reduces the idling error-rates for some qubits, it increases the…
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