In Situ Quantum Analog Pulse Characterization via Structured Signal Processing
By: Yulong Dong, Christopher Kang, Murphy Yuezhen Niu
Potential Business Impact:
Improves quantum computers' ability to run complex simulations.
Analog quantum simulators can directly emulate time-dependent Hamiltonian dynamics, enabling the exploration of diverse physical phenomena such as phase transitions, quench dynamics, and non-equilibrium processes. Realizing accurate analog simulations requires high-fidelity time-dependent pulse control, yet existing calibration schemes are tailored to digital gate characterization and cannot be readily extended to learn continuous pulse trajectories. We present a characterization algorithm for in situ learning of pulse trajectories by extending the Quantum Signal Processing (QSP) framework to analyze time-dependent pulses. By combining QSP with a logical-level analog-digital mapping paradigm, our method reconstructs a smooth pulse directly from queries of the time-ordered propagator, without requiring mid-circuit measurements or additional evolution. Unlike conventional Trotterization-based methods, our approach avoids unscalable performance degradation arising from accumulated local truncation errors as the logical-level segmentation increases. Through rigorous theoretical analysis and extensive numerical simulations, we demonstrate that our method achieves high accuracy with strong efficiency and robustness against SPAM as well as depolarizing errors, providing a lightweight and optimal validation protocol for analog quantum simulators capable of detecting major hardware faults.
Similar Papers
HPC-Accelerated Simulation and Calibration for Silicon Quantum Dots
Quantum Physics
Makes quantum computers build better faster.
Universal Dynamics with Globally Controlled Analog Quantum Simulators
Quantum Physics
Makes quantum computers do more complex tasks.
Pulse-to-Circuit Characterization of Stealthy Crosstalk Attack on Multi-Tenant Superconducting Quantum Hardware
Quantum Physics
Protects secret quantum computer information from hackers.