Gleipnir: Toward Practical Error Analysis for Quantum Programs (Extended Version)
Abstract
Practical error analysis is essential for the design, optimization, and evaluation of Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum(NISQ) computing. However, bounding errors in quantum programs is a grand challenge, because the effects of quantum errors depend on exponentially large quantum states. In this work, we present Gleipnir, a novel methodology toward practically computing verified error bounds in quantum programs. Gleipnir introduces the -diamond norm, an error metric constrained by a quantum predicate consisting of the approximate state and its distance to the ideal state . This predicate can be computed adaptively using tensor networks based on the Matrix Product States. Gleipnir features a lightweight logic for reasoning about error bounds in noisy quantum programs, based on the -diamond norm metric. Our experimental results show that Gleipnir is able to efficiently generate tight error bounds for real-world quantum programs with 10 to 100 qubits, and can be used to evaluate the error mitigation performance of quantum compiler transformations.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2104.06349,
title = {Gleipnir: Toward Practical Error Analysis for Quantum Programs (Extended Version)},
author = {Runzhou Tao and Yunong Shi and Jianan Yao and John Hui and Frederic T. Chong and Ronghui Gu},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2104.06349},
year = {2021}
}
Comments
typos corrected