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Quantum Overlapping Tomography

Quantum Physics 2020-03-18 v2 Quantum Gases Strongly Correlated Electrons

Abstract

It is now experimentally possible to entangle thousands of qubits, and efficiently measure each qubit in parallel in a distinct basis. To fully characterize an unknown entangled state of nn qubits, one requires an exponential number of measurements in nn, which is experimentally unfeasible even for modest system sizes. By leveraging (i) that single-qubit measurements can be made in parallel, and (ii) the theory of perfect hash families, we show that all kk-qubit reduced density matrices of an nn qubit state can be determined with at most eO(k)log2(n)e^{\mathcal{O}(k)} \log^2(n) rounds of parallel measurements. We provide concrete measurement protocols which realize this bound. As an example, we argue that with current experiments, the entanglement between every pair of qubits in a system of 1000 qubits could be measured and completely characterized in a few days. This corresponds to completely characterizing entanglement of nearly half a million pairs of qubits.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1908.02754,
  title  = {Quantum Overlapping Tomography},
  author = {Jordan Cotler and Frank Wilczek},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1908.02754},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

7 pages, 1 figure; v2: New appendix added, new measurement estimates