Monday, April 21, 2014 1:00 pm
-
1:00 pm
EDT (GMT -04:00)
QNC 3401
Candidate
Daniel Puzzuoli, Applied Math, University of Waterloo
Title
Honest
Approximations
to
Realistic
Fault
Models
and
Their
Application
to
Efficient
Simulation
of
Quantum
Error
Correction
Abstract
Understanding
the
performance
of
realistic
noisy
encoded
circuits
is
an
important
task
for
the
development
of
large-scale
practical
quantum
computers.
Specifically,
the
development
of
proposals
for
quantum
computation
must
be
well
informed
by
both
the
qualities
of
the
low-level
physical
system
of
choice,
and
the
properties
of
the
high-level
quantum
error
correction
and
fault-tolerance
schemes.
Gaining
insight
into
how
a
particular
computation
will
play
out
on
a
physical
system
is
in
general
a
difficult
problem,
as
the
classical
simulation
of
arbitrary
noisy
quantum
circuits
is
inefficient.
Nevertheless,
important
classes
of
noisy
circuits
can
be
simulated
efficiently.
Such
simulations
have
led
to
numerical
estimates
of
threshold
errors
rates
and
resource
estimates
in
topological
codes
subject
to
efficiently
simulable
error
models.
This
thesis
describes
and
analyzes
a
method
that
my
collaborators
and
I
have
introduced
for
leveraging
efficient
simulation
techniques
to
understand
the
performance
of
large
quantum
processors
that
are
subject
to
errors
lying
outside
of
the
efficient
simulation
algorithm’s
applicability.
The
idea
is
to
approximate
an
arbitrary
gate
error
with
an
error
from
the
efficiently
simulable
set
in
a
way
that
“honestly”
represents
the
original
error’s
ability
to
preserve
or
distort
quantum
information.
After
introducing
and
analyzing
the
individual
gate
approximation
method,
its
utility
as
a
means
for
estimating
circuit
performance
is
studied.
In
particular,
the
method
is
tested
within
the
use-case
for
which
it
was
originally
conceived;
understanding
the
performance
of
a
hypothetical
physical
implementation
of
a
quantum
error-correction
protocol.
It
is
found
that
the
method
performs
exactly
as
desired.