6
talks
0
committee roles
0
leadership roles
2019–2023
years active
Contributions
QIP QCrypt TQC presenter award · △program ◇steering ○organising □local · filled = chair
Talks
| Title | Conference | Type | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| General guarantees for randomized benchmarking with random quantum circuits | QIP 2023 | regular | ▸Markus Heinrich, Martin Kliesch |
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Closed-form analytic expressions for shadow estimation with brickwork circuits ↗
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TQC 2023 | regular | Mirko Arienzo, Markus Heinrich, Martin Kliesch |
Properties of quantum systems can be estimated using classical shadows, which implement measurements based on random ensembles of unitaries. Originally derived for global Clifford unitaries and products of single-qubit Clifford gates, practical implementations are limited to the latter scheme for moderate numbers of qubits. Beyond local gates, the accurate implementation of very short random circuits with two-local gates is still experimentally feasible and, therefore, interesting for implementing measurements in near-term applications. In this work, we derive closed-form analytical expressions for shadow estimation using brickwork circuits with two layers of parallel two-local Haar-random (or Clifford) unitaries. Besides the construction of the classical shadow, our results give rise to sample-complexity guarantees for estimating Pauli observables. We then compare the performance of shadow estimation with brickwork circuits to the established approach using local Clifford unitaries and find improved sample complexity in the estimation of observables supported on sufficiently many qubits. |
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| Efficient unitary designs with a system-size independent number of non-Clifford gates | QIP 2021 | regular | Jonas Haferkamp, Felipe Montealegre-Mora, Markus Heinrich, Jens Eisert, David Gross |
Abstract Many quantum information protocols require the implementation of random unitaries. Because it takes exponential resources to produce Haar-random unitaries drawn from the full n-qubit group, one often resorts to t-designs. Unitary t-designs mimic the Haar-measure up to t-th moments. It is known that Clifford operations can implement at most 3-designs. In this work, we quantify the non-Clifford resources required to break this barrier. We find that it suffices to inject O(t^4log^2(t)log(1/e)) many non-Clifford gates into a polynomial-depth random Clifford circuit to obtain an e-approximate t-design. Strikingly, the number of non-Clifford gates required is independent of the system size -- asymptotically, the density of non-Clifford gates is allowed to tend to zero. We also derive novel bounds on the convergence time of random Clifford circuits to the t-th moment of the uniform distribution on the Clifford group. Our proofs exploit a recently developed variant of Schur-Weyl duality for the Clifford group, as well as bounds on restricted spectral gaps of averaging operators. |
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| A general framework for randomized benchmarking | TQC 2021 | regular | Jonas Helsen, Emilio Onorati, Albert H. Werner, Jens Eisert |
| Efficient unitary designs with a system size independent number of non-Clifford gates | TQC 2020 | regular | Jonas Haferkamp, Felipe Montealegre-Mora, Markus Heinrich, Jens Eisert, David Gross |
| Recovering quantum gates from few average gate fidelities | QIP 2019 | regular ▸ presenter | Richard Kueng, Shelby Kimmel, Yi-Kai Liu, David Gross, Jens Eisert, Martin Kliesch |
Collaborators
| Co-author | Joint talks |
|---|---|
| Jens Eisert | 4 |
| Markus Heinrich | 4 |
| David Gross | 3 |
| Martin Kliesch | 3 |
| Felipe Montealegre-Mora | 2 |
| Jonas Haferkamp | 2 |
| Albert H. Werner | 1 |
| Emilio Onorati | 1 |
| Jonas Helsen | 1 |
| Mirko Arienzo | 1 |
| Richard Kueng | 1 |
| Shelby Kimmel | 1 |
| Yi-Kai Liu | 1 |