Benchmarking noise extrapolation with the OpenPulse control framework

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Abstract

Distilling precise estimates from noisy intermediate scale quantum (NISQ) data has recently attracted considerable attention Kandala, Nature (London) 567, 491 (2019)NATUAS0028-083610.1038/s41586-019-1040-7. In order to augment digital qubit metrics, such as gate fidelity, we discuss analog error mitigability, i.e., the ability to accurately distill precise observable estimates, as a hybrid quantum classical computing benchmarking task. Specifically, using Rabi oscillations as a test program, we characterize single qubit error rates on IBM's Poughkeepsie superconducting quantum hardware, incorporate control-mediated noise dependence into a generalized rescaling protocol, and analyze how noise characteristics influence Richardson extrapolation-based error mitigation. Our results identify regions in the space of Hamiltonian control fields and circuit depth which are most amenable to reliable noise extrapolation, as well as shed light on how low-level hardware characterization can be used as a predictive tool for uncertainty quantification in error-mitigated NISQ computations.

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Garmon, J. W. O., Pooser, R. C., & Dumitrescu, E. F. (2020). Benchmarking noise extrapolation with the OpenPulse control framework. Physical Review A, 101(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.101.042308

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