We develop a classical bit-flip correction method to mitigate measurement errors on quantum computers. This method can be applied to any operator, any number of qubits, and any realistic bit-flip probability. We first demonstrate the successful performance of this method by correcting the noisy measurements of the ground-state energy of the longitudinal Ising model. We then generalize our results to arbitrary operators and test our method both numerically and experimentally on IBM quantum hardware. As a result, our correction method reduces the measurement error on the quantum hardware by up to one order of magnitude. We finally discuss how to pre-process the method and extend it to other errors sources beyond measurement errors. For local Hamiltonians, the overhead costs are polynomial in the number of qubits, even if multi-qubit correlations are included.
@article{arxiv.2007.03663,
title = {Measurement Error Mitigation in Quantum Computers Through Classical Bit-Flip Correction},
author = {Lena Funcke and Tobias Hartung and Karl Jansen and Stefan Kühn and Paolo Stornati and Xiaoyang Wang},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2007.03663},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
27 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables, v3: updated to match journal version