Quantum memory assisted observable estimation
Abstract
The estimation of many-qubit observables is an essential task of quantum information processing. The generally applicable approach is to decompose the observables into weighted sums of multi-qubit Pauli strings, i.e., tensor products of single-qubit Pauli matrices, which can readily be measured with single qubit rotations. The accumulation of shot noise in this approach, however, severely limits the achievable variance for a finite number of measurements. We introduce a novel method, dubbed Coherent Pauli Summation (CPS) that circumvents this limitation by exploiting access to a single-qubit quantum memory in which measurement information can be stored and accumulated. Our algorithm offers a reduction in the required number of measurements for a given variance that scales linearly with the number of Pauli strings of the decomposed observable. Our work demonstrates how a single long-coherence qubit memory can assist the operation of noisy many-qubit quantum devices in a cardinal task.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2212.07710,
title = {Quantum memory assisted observable estimation},
author = {Liubov A. Markovich and Attaallah Almasi and Sina Zeytinoğlu and Johannes Borregaard},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2212.07710},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
21 pages, 2 figures