| Literature DB >> 25910102 |
Dawei Lu1, Hang Li1,2,3, Denis-Alexandre Trottier1, Jun Li1,4, Aharon Brodutch1, Anthony P Krismanich5, Ahmad Ghavami5, Gary I Dmitrienko5, Guilu Long2,3, Jonathan Baugh1,5, Raymond Laflamme1,6,7.
Abstract
One of the major experimental achievements in the past decades is the ability to control quantum systems to high levels of precision. To quantify the level of control we need to characterize the dynamical evolution. Full characterization via quantum process tomography is impractical and often unnecessary. For most practical purposes, it is enough to estimate more general quantities such as the average fidelity. Here we use a unitary 2-design and twirling protocol for efficiently estimating the average fidelity of Clifford gates, to certify a 7-qubit entangling gate in a nuclear magnetic resonance quantum processor. Compared with more than 10^{8} experiments required by full process tomography, we conducted 1656 experiments to satisfy a statistical confidence level of 99%. The average fidelity of this Clifford gate in experiment is 55.1%, and rises to at least 87.5% if the signal's decay due to decoherence is taken into account. The entire protocol of certifying Clifford gates is efficient and scalable, and can easily be extended to any general quantum information processor with minor modifications.Year: 2015 PMID: 25910102 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.140505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161