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Quantum gate and quantum state preparation through neighboring optimal contro

Posted on:2017-08-05Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Maryland, College ParkCandidate:Peng, YuchenFull Text:PDF
GTID:1460390011487757Subject:Quantum physics
Abstract/Summary:
Successful implementation of fault-tolerant quantum computation on a system of qubits places severe demands on the hardware used to control the many-qubit state. It is known that an accuracy threshold Pa exists for any quantum gate that is to be used for such a computation to be able to continue for an unlimited number of steps. Specifically, the error probability Pe for such a gate must fall below the accuracy threshold: Pe < Pa. Estimates of Pa vary widely, though Pa ∼ 10-4 has emerged as a challenging target for hardware designers. I present a theoretical framework based on neighboring optimal control that takes as input a good quantum gate and returns a new gate with better performance. I illustrate this approach by applying it to a universal set of quantum gates produced using non-adiabatic rapid passage. Performance improvements are substantial comparing to the original (unimproved) gates, both for ideal and non-ideal controls. Under suitable conditions detailed below, all gate error probabilities fall by 1 to 4 orders of magnitude below the target threshold of 10-4.;After applying the neighboring optimal control theory to improve the performance of quantum gates in a universal set, I further apply the general control theory in a two-step procedure for fault-tolerant logical state preparation, and I illustrate this procedure by preparing a logical Bell state fault-tolerantly. The two-step preparation procedure is as follow: Step 1 provides a one-shot procedure using neighboring optimal control theory to prepare a physical qubit state which is a high-fidelity approximation to the Bell state |beta 01⟩ = 1/√2(|01⟩ + |10⟩). I show that for ideal (non-ideal) control, an approximate |beta01⟩ state could be prepared with error probability epsilon ∼ 10-6 (10-5) with one-shot local operations. Step 2 then takes a block of p pairs of physical qubits, each prepared in |beta 01⟩ state using Step 1, and fault-tolerantly prepares the logical Bell state for the C4 quantum error detection code.
Keywords/Search Tags:Quantum, State, Neighboring optimal, Preparation, Error
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