English

Physical Implementability of Linear Maps and Its Application in Error Mitigation

Quantum Physics 2021-12-08 v2 Information Theory High Energy Physics - Theory Mathematical Physics math.IT math.MP

Abstract

Completely positive and trace-preserving maps characterize physically implementable quantum operations. On the other hand, general linear maps, such as positive but not completely positive maps, which can not be physically implemented, are fundamental ingredients in quantum information, both in theoretical and practical perspectives. This raises the question of how well one can simulate or approximate the action of a general linear map by physically implementable operations. In this work, we introduce a systematic framework to resolve this task using the quasiprobability decomposition technique. We decompose a target linear map into a linear combination of physically implementable operations and introduce the physical implementability measure as the least amount of negative portion that the quasiprobability must pertain, which directly quantifies the cost of simulating a given map using physically implementable quantum operations. We show this measure is efficiently computable by semidefinite programs and prove several properties of this measure, such as faithfulness, additivity, and unitary invariance. We derive lower and upper bounds in terms of the Choi operator's trace norm and obtain analytic expressions for several linear maps of practical interests. Furthermore, we endow this measure with an operational meaning within the quantum error mitigation scenario: it establishes the lower bound of the sampling cost achievable via the quasiprobability decomposition technique. In particular, for parallel quantum noises, we show that global error mitigation has no advantage over local error mitigation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2012.10959,
  title  = {Physical Implementability of Linear Maps and Its Application in Error Mitigation},
  author = {Jiaqing Jiang and Kun Wang and Xin Wang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2012.10959},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

25 pages, v2 accepted by Quantum

R2 v1 2026-06-23T21:06:35.651Z