Sample-efficient quantum error mitigation via classical learning surrogates
By: Wei-You Liao , Ge Yan , Yujin Song and more
Potential Business Impact:
Makes noisy quantum computers work better.
The pursuit of practical quantum utility on near-term quantum processors is critically challenged by their inherent noise. Quantum error mitigation (QEM) techniques are leading solutions to improve computation fidelity with relatively low qubit-overhead, while full-scale quantum error correction remains a distant goal. However, QEM techniques incur substantial measurement overheads, especially when applied to families of quantum circuits parameterized by classical inputs. Focusing on zero-noise extrapolation (ZNE), a widely adopted QEM technique, here we devise the surrogate-enabled ZNE (S-ZNE), which leverages classical learning surrogates to perform ZNE entirely on the classical side. Unlike conventional ZNE, whose measurement cost scales linearly with the number of circuits, S-ZNE requires only constant measurement overhead for an entire family of quantum circuits, offering superior scalability. Theoretical analysis indicates that S-ZNE achieves accuracy comparable to conventional ZNE in many practical scenarios, and numerical experiments on up to 100-qubit ground-state energy and quantum metrology tasks confirm its effectiveness. Our approach provides a template that can be effectively extended to other quantum error mitigation protocols, opening a promising path toward scalable error mitigation.
Similar Papers
Scalable Quantum Error Mitigation with Neighbor-Informed Learning
Quantum Physics
Fixes quantum computer mistakes using smart learning.
Enhancing the Scalability of Classical Surrogates for Real-World Quantum Machine Learning Applications
Quantum Physics
Lets quantum computer ideas run on regular computers.
On the Importance of Error Mitigation for Quantum Computation
Quantum Physics
Fixes errors in quantum computers for faster results.