Abstract

In the scale-up of quantum computers, the framework underpinning fault-tolerance generally relies on the strong assumption that environmental noise affecting qubit logic is uncorrelated (Markovian). However, as physical devices progress well into the complex multi-qubit regime, attention is turning to understanding the appearance and mitigation of correlated — or non-Markovian — noise, which poses a serious challenge to the progression of quantum technology. This error type has previously remained elusive to characterisation techniques. Here, we develop a framework for characterising non-Markovian dynamics in quantum systems and experimentally test it on multi-qubit superconducting quantum devices. Where noisy processes cannot be accounted for using standard Markovian techniques, our reconstruction predicts the behaviour of the devices with an infidelity of 10−3. Our results show this characterisation technique leads to superior quantum control and extension of coherence time by effective decoupling from the non-Markovian environment. This framework, validated by our results, is applicable to any controlled quantum device and offers a significant step towards optimal device operation and noise reduction.

Highlights

  • In the scale-up of quantum computers, the framework underpinning fault-tolerance generally relies on the strong assumption that environmental noise affecting qubit logic is uncorrelated (Markovian)

  • The theoretical machinery for open quantum system dynamics is well-oiled in low-coupling cases, but strong environmental interactions can lead to non-trivial dynamical memory effects that are difficult to understand, much less control

  • Constructing a digestible picture of nonMarkovian behaviour has proven difficult, and violates the error model assumed in these methods. This is because quantum correlations can forbid the division of dynamical processes into arbitrary steps of completely positive (CP), linear maps[12]

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Summary

Results

We use Eq (9) to find the parameters that produce final states closest to the ideal outputs of a randomly selected non-unitary operation, before applying the corresponding gate and performing quantum process tomography on it. Since interaction time is not varied, the maximum achievable non-unitarity is fixed, which is why the process fidelity decreases when gates with a lower unitarity are targeted This shows a way forward in which extended control regimes could be used for the implementation of non-unital and trace-decreasing maps which are necessary for the reconstruction of the full process tensor. For this to work, we do not need to perform control operations on the neighbouring qubit beyond its initialisation. The user need only specify a desired outcome, without studying the means to achieve it

Discussion
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