2019_EJRNL_PP_Abhinav_Kandala.pdf
Terbatas Irwan Sofiyan
» ITB
Terbatas Irwan Sofiyan
» ITB
Quantum computation, a paradigm of computing that is completely
different from classical methods, benefits from theoretically
proved speed-ups for certain problems and can be used to study
the properties of quantum systems1. Yet, because of the inherently
fragile nature of the physical computing elements (qubits), achieving
quantum advantages over classical computation requires extremely
low error rates for qubit operations, as well as substantial physical
qubits, to realize fault tolerance via quantum error correction2,3.
However, recent theoretical work4,5 has shown that the accuracy of
computation (based on expectation values of quantum observables)
can be enhanced through an extrapolation of results from a
collection of experiments of varying noise. Here we demonstrate this
error mitigation protocol on a superconducting quantum processor,
enhancing its computational capability, with no additional hardware
modifications. We apply the protocol to mitigate errors in canonical
single- and two-qubit experiments and then extend its application
to the variational optimization6–8 of Hamiltonians for quantum
chemistry and magnetism9. We effectively demonstrate that the
suppression of incoherent errors helps to achieve an otherwise
inaccessible level of accuracy in the variational solutions using our
noisy processor. These results demonstrate that error mitigation
techniques will enable substantial improvements in the capabilities
of near-term quantum computing hardware.
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