4.6 Article

Machine learning pipeline for quantum state estimation with incomplete measurements

Journal

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/2632-2153/abe5f5

Keywords

quantum state estimation; quantum state tomography; machine learning; convolutional neural networks; multiple imputation; extreme gradient boosting; stacked generalization

Funding

  1. Army Research Laboratory
  2. Army Research Office [W911NF-19-2-0087, W911NF-20-2-0168]

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This paper explores the resilience of machine-learning-based quantum state estimation techniques to missing measurements, achieving quantum state estimation from partial measurement results that outperforms previously developed methods and traditional approaches.
Two-qubit systems typically employ 36 projective measurements for high-fidelity tomographic estimation. The overcomplete nature of the 36 measurements suggests possible robustness of the estimation procedure to missing measurements. In this paper, we explore the resilience of machine-learning-based quantum state estimation techniques to missing measurements by creating a pipeline of stacked machine learning models for imputation, denoising, and state estimation. When applied to simulated noiseless and noisy projective measurement data for both pure and mixed states, we demonstrate quantum state estimation from partial measurement results that outperforms previously developed machine-learning-based methods in reconstruction fidelity and several conventional methods in terms of resource scaling. Notably, our developed model does not require training a separate model for each missing measurement, making it potentially applicable to quantum state estimation of large quantum systems where preprocessing is computationally infeasible due to the exponential scaling of quantum system dimension.

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