Mitigating errors by quantum verification and post-selection
Rawad Mezher, James Mills, and Elham Kashefi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a quantum error mitigation method combining verification protocols and post-selection to improve the accuracy of observable estimates in noisy quantum circuits, suitable for current hardware.
Contribution
It presents a novel error mitigation technique using accreditation protocols and post-selection, with rigorous error guarantees and applicability to time-dependent noise.
Findings
Effective error mitigation demonstrated on current quantum hardware.
Provides rigorous error bounds under realistic noise assumptions.
Compatible with time-dependent noise behaviors.
Abstract
Correcting errors due to noise in quantum circuits run on current and near-term quantum hardware is essential for any convincing demonstration of quantum advantage. Indeed, in many cases it has been shown that noise renders quantum circuits efficiently classically simulable, thereby destroying any quantum advantage potentially offered by an ideal (noiseless) implementation of these circuits. Although the technique of quantum error correction (QEC) allows to correct these errors very accurately, QEC usually requires a large overhead of physical qubits which is not reachable with currently available quantum hardware. This has been the motivation behind the field of quantum error mitigation, which aims at developing techniques to correct an important part of the errors in quantum circuits, while also being compatible with current and near-term quantum hardware. In this work, we present…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Radiation Effects in Electronics · Low-power high-performance VLSI design
