| Literature DB >> 35710571 |
Kirill Dubovitskii1, Yuriy Makhlin2,3.
Abstract
In randomized benchmarking of quantum logical gates, partial twirling can be used for simpler implementation, better scaling, and higher accuracy and reliability. For instance, for two-qubit gates, single-qubit twirling is easier to realize than full averaging. We analyze such simplified, partial twirling and demonstrate that, unlike for the standard randomized benchmarking, the measured decay of fidelity is a linear combination of exponentials with different decay rates (3 for two qubits and single-bit twirling). The evolution with the sequence length is governed by an iteration matrix, whose spectrum gives the decay rates. For generic two-qubit gates one slowest exponential dominates and characterizes gate errors in three channels. Its decay rate is close, but different from that in the standard randomized benchmarking, and we find the leading correction. Using relations to the local invariants of two-qubit gates we identify all exceptional gates with several slow exponentials and analyze possibilities to extract their decay rates from the measured curves.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35710571 PMCID: PMC9203587 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-13813-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Distribution of possible values of the entries , of the iteration matrix for possible two-qubit gates, drawn uniformly from the unitary group U(4). Each point corresponds to a family of two-qubit gates. Large solid dots correspond to (the families of) the gates SWAP, iSWAP, , identity, and CNOT. Boundaries of this region are discussed in the text. The dashed line indicates the family in Eq. (42) with the solid square showing the gate especially suited for partial RB—with only a single decay factor (here ), see discussion around Eq. (42). Inset: the partial-RB decay factors for each of these gates, that is the eigenvalues of the respective iteration matrix .