Optimal quantum state tomography with local informationally complete measurements
Casey Jameson, Zhen Qin, Alireza Goldar, Michael B. Wakin, Zhihui Zhu,, Zhexuan Gong

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that efficient quantum state tomography for many 1D quantum states can be achieved using local SIC-POVM measurements, with polynomial resource scaling, supported by theoretical bounds and numerical methods.
Contribution
It introduces an optimal QST protocol using local SIC-POVM measurements for a broad class of 1D quantum states, including short-range entangled and thermal states.
Findings
Efficient QST for typical 1D states with polynomial resources.
Local SIC-POVM measurements enable near-optimal state reconstruction.
Long-range entangled states like GHZ are not generally recoverable with this method.
Abstract
Quantum state tomography (QST) remains the gold standard for benchmarking and verification of near-term quantum devices. While QST for a generic quantum many-body state requires an exponentially large amount of resources, most physical quantum states are structured and can often be represented by a much smaller number of parameters, making efficient QST potentially possible. A prominent example is a matrix product state (MPS) or a matrix product density operator (MPDO), which is believed to represent most physical states generated by one-dimensional (1D) quantum devices. We study whether a general MPS/MPDO state can be recovered with bounded errors using only a number of state copies polynomial in the number of qubits, which is necessary for efficient QST. To make this question practically interesting, we assume only local measurements of qubits directly on the target state. By using a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
