Randomized Benchmarking beyond Groups

Randomized benchmarking (RB) is the gold standard for experimentally evaluating the quality of quantum operations. The current framework for RB is centered on groups and their representations but this can be problematic. For example, Clifford circuits need up to O(n^{2}) gates and thus Clifford RB c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jianxin Chen, Dawei Ding, Cupjin Huang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2022-08-01
Series:PRX Quantum
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PRXQuantum.3.030320
Description
Summary:Randomized benchmarking (RB) is the gold standard for experimentally evaluating the quality of quantum operations. The current framework for RB is centered on groups and their representations but this can be problematic. For example, Clifford circuits need up to O(n^{2}) gates and thus Clifford RB cannot scale to larger devices. Attempts to remedy this include new schemes such as linear cross-entropy benchmarking (XEB), cycle benchmarking, and nonuniform RB but they do not fall within the group-based RB framework. In this work, we formulate the universal randomized benchmarking (URB) framework, which does away with the group structure and also replaces the recovery-gate-plus-measurement component with a general “postprocessing” positive operator-valued measurement (POVM). Not only does this framework cover most of the existing benchmarking schemes but it also gives the language for and helps inspire the formulation of new schemes. We specifically consider a class of URB schemes called twirling schemes. For twirling schemes, the postprocessing POVM approximately factorizes into an intermediate channel, inverting maps, and a final measurement. This leads us to study the twirling map corresponding to the gate ensemble specified by the scheme. We prove that if this twirling map is strictly within unit distance of the Haar twirling map in induced diamond norm, the probability of measurement as a function of gate length is a single exponential decay up to small error terms. The core technical tool we use is the matrix perturbation theory of linear operators on quantum channels.
ISSN:2691-3399