Pauli error estimation via Population Recovery

Steven T. Flammia1,2 and Ryan O'Donnell3

1AWS Center for Quantum Computing, USA
2IQIM, California Institute of Technology, USA
3Computer Science Department, Carnegie Mellon University, USA

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Abstract

Motivated by estimation of quantum noise models, we study the problem of learning a Pauli channel, or more generally the Pauli error rates of an arbitrary channel. By employing a novel reduction to the "Population Recovery" problem, we give an extremely simple algorithm that learns the Pauli error rates of an $n$-qubit channel to precision $\epsilon$ in $\ell_\infty$ using just $O(1/\epsilon^2) \log(n/\epsilon)$ applications of the channel. This is optimal up to the logarithmic factors. Our algorithm uses only unentangled state preparation and measurements, and the post-measurement classical runtime is just an $O(1/\epsilon)$ factor larger than the measurement data size. It is also impervious to a limited model of measurement noise where heralded measurement failures occur independently with probability $\le 1/4$.
We then consider the case where the noise channel is close to the identity, meaning that the no-error outcome occurs with probability $1-\eta$. In the regime of small $\eta$ we extend our algorithm to achieve multiplicative precision $1 \pm \epsilon$ (i.e., additive precision $\epsilon \eta$) using just $O\bigl(\frac{1}{\epsilon^2 \eta}\bigr) \log(n/\epsilon)$ applications of the channel.

The term "population recovery" is usually understood in the context of biology, where an endangered species (such as the gray wolf pictured here) is protected and their numbers begin to rebound. In the context of computer science, however, it refers to the ability to learn a probability distribution given only access to noisy samples. The "population" that we wish to learn ("recover") is an unknown distribution on bit strings, and our ability to sample from this distribution is subject to independent noise, such as an erasure channel or a bit-flip channel.

In this work, we consider the problem of learning a probability distribution over Pauli operators; that is, we wish to learn a Pauli channel. Furthermore, we wish to do so using only very simple (product state) preparations and basis measurements. Learning Pauli channels with minimal resources is important for learning the errors in a noisy quantum computer and finding better ways to fix or otherwise mitigate those errors.

Our work shows that this problem reduces to the classical problem of population recovery with a certain type of asymmetric noise. We then show that the standard algorithms known in the literature for population recovery apply unchanged to this type of noise. This gives us very sample-efficient algorithms for learning Pauli channels that use very simple state preparations and measurements.

We also show a few other interesting tidbits. First, the algorithm is naturally robust to certain types of additional measurement noise. We can also extend the algorithm to handle the case where most of the time only a single Pauli occurs (say, the identity Pauli), and we wish to recover the remaining population with a precision that is relative to the frequency of the remainder population (a more stringent task). We show an interesting connection to Fourier analysis on boolean variables. Finally, we give an open source implementation in Julia of one of the algorithms.

► BibTeX data

► References

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Cited by

[1] Matthias C. Caro, Hsin-Yuan Huang, Nicholas Ezzell, Joe Gibbs, Andrew T. Sornborger, Lukasz Cincio, Patrick J. Coles, and Zoë Holmes, "Out-of-distribution generalization for learning quantum dynamics", Nature Communications 14 1, 3751 (2023).

[2] Kaifeng Bu, Dax Enshan Koh, Roy J. Garcia, and Arthur Jaffe, "Classical shadows with Pauli-invariant unitary ensembles", npj Quantum Information 10 1, 6 (2024).

[3] Thomas Wagner, Hermann Kampermann, Dagmar Bruß, and Martin Kliesch, "Learning Logical Pauli Noise in Quantum Error Correction", Physical Review Letters 130 20, 200601 (2023).

[4] Robin Harper and Steven T. Flammia, "Learning Correlated Noise in a 39-Qubit Quantum Processor", PRX Quantum 4 4, 040311 (2023).

[5] Thomas Wagner, Hermann Kampermann, Dagmar Bruß, and Martin Kliesch, "Pauli channels can be estimated from syndrome measurements in quantum error correction", Quantum 6, 809 (2022).

[6] Senrui Chen, Yunchao Liu, Matthew Otten, Alireza Seif, Bill Fefferman, and Liang Jiang, "The learnability of Pauli noise", Nature Communications 14 1, 52 (2023).

[7] Senrui Chen, Sisi Zhou, Alireza Seif, and Liang Jiang, "Quantum advantages for Pauli channel estimation", Physical Review A 105 3, 032435 (2022).

[8] Hsin-Yuan Huang, Steven T. Flammia, and John Preskill, "Foundations for learning from noisy quantum experiments", arXiv:2204.13691, (2022).

[9] Sitan Chen and Weiyuan Gong, "Efficient Pauli channel estimation with logarithmic quantum memory", arXiv:2309.14326, (2023).

[10] Steven T. Flammia, "Averaged circuit eigenvalue sampling", arXiv:2108.05803, (2021).

[11] Sitan Chen, Jordan Cotler, Hsin-Yuan Huang, and Jerry Li, "Exponential separations between learning with and without quantum memory", arXiv:2111.05881, (2021).

[12] Arnaud Carignan-Dugas, Dar Dahlen, Ian Hincks, Egor Ospadov, Stefanie J. Beale, Samuele Ferracin, Joshua Skanes-Norman, Joseph Emerson, and Joel J. Wallman, "The Error Reconstruction and Compiled Calibration of Quantum Computing Cycles", arXiv:2303.17714, (2023).

[13] Yifei Chen, Zhan Yu, Chenghong Zhu, and Xin Wang, "Efficient information recovery from Pauli noise via classical shadow", arXiv:2305.04148, (2023).

[14] Xuan Du Trinh and Nengkun Yu, "Adaptivity is not helpful for Pauli channel learning", arXiv:2403.09033, (2024).

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