Characterizing large-scale quantum computers via cycle benchmarking

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Abstract

Quantum computers promise to solve certain problems more efficiently than their digital counterparts. A major challenge towards practically useful quantum computing is characterizing and reducing the various errors that accumulate during an algorithm running on large-scale processors. Current characterization techniques are unable to adequately account for the exponentially large set of potential errors, including cross-talk and other correlated noise sources. Here we develop cycle benchmarking, a rigorous and practically scalable protocol for characterizing local and global errors across multi-qubit quantum processors. We experimentally demonstrate its practicality by quantifying such errors in non-entangling and entangling operations on an ion-trap quantum computer with up to 10 qubits, and total process fidelities for multi-qubit entangling gates ranging from 99.6 (1) % for 2 qubits to 86 (2) % for 10 qubits. Furthermore, cycle benchmarking data validates that the error rate per single-qubit gate and per two-qubit coupling does not increase with increasing system size.

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Erhard, A., Wallman, J. J., Postler, L., Meth, M., Stricker, R., Martinez, E. A., … Blatt, R. (2019). Characterizing large-scale quantum computers via cycle benchmarking. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13068-7

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