The following description relates to generating a control sequence for control of a quantum system.
Control fields are often used to manipulate quantum systems. For example, a sequence of electromagnetic pulses can be used to control a spin system. Algorithms based on Optimal Control Theory (OCT) have been used to engineer control fields for particular operations. For example, Gradient Ascent Pulse Engineering (GRAPE) provides a framework for using optimal control theory to generate pulse sequences for magnetic resonance applications.
In a general aspect, a control sequence for a quantum system is generated based on a distortion model.
In some aspects, a control system is configured to interact with a quantum system. The quantum system includes qubits that respond to a control signal generated by the control system, and the control system is configured to generate the control signal in response to an input signal. A control sequence (which may include, for example, a sequence of values for the input signal) can be generated by a computing system based on a target operation to be applied to the qubits. The control sequence can be generated based on the target operation, a quantum system model, a distortion model and possibly other information. The quantum system model represents the quantum system and includes a control parameter representing the control signal. The distortion model represents a nonlinear relationship between the control signal and the input signal. The control sequence can be applied to the quantum system by operation of the control system.
Implementations of these and other aspects may include one or more of the following features. The target operation, the quantum system model and the distortion operator are accessed by an optimization engine to generate the control sequence. Generating the control sequence comprises using optimal control theory to iteratively modify the sequence of values. An uncertainty model represents uncertainty in a parameter of the control system, and the pulse sequence is generated based on the target operation, the quantum system model, the distortion model and the uncertainty model. The control system includes classical control hardware, and the non-linear relationship represents a classical phenomenon.
Implementations of these and other aspects may include one or more of the following features. The quantum system includes a spin system, the control system includes a superconducting resonator device, and the control parameter includes the amplitude and phase of the magnetic field generated by the superconducting resonator device. The input signal is a voltage signal received by the control system, and the distortion model represents a non-linear relationship between the amplitude of the magnetic field and the amplitude of the voltage signal received by the control system.
The details of one or more implementations are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
In some aspects of what is described here, a model of classical controller hardware and a description of its operation are incorporated into a general procedure that can produce high fidelity, robust control sequences for quantum devices. In some instances, gates that are robust to variations in the behavior of the classical controller may be designed by including not only a model of the classical controller, but also a description of the uncertainty in the parameters of the same model within the quantum gate optimizing routine.
In some implementations, a model of a classical controller with non-invertible, possibly nonlinear, dynamics can be incorporated into computer-implemented routines that find high fidelity, robust quantum gates or other types of control sequences. For instance, control pulses can be considered as having both an input space and an output space with the classical controller between them. In some cases, the routine is performed by a classical computer that is distinct from the quantum device. After the control sequence is designed, it can be applied by the classical controller, for example, to operate the quantum device.
The demands of classical control infrastructure typically complexify and increase as quantum devices scale. In some cases, the interaction form of classical controllers with quantum devices can be modified to allow such scaling. In some instances, a robust, high-fidelity control sequence for a quantum device can be generated using the example techniques described here. In some instances, the control sequence includes one or more quantum gates or other operations designed to operate on a quantum system (e.g., on one or more qubits in a quantum system). In some cases, the quantum gates are designed to be robust to variations or distortions in the behavior of a classical controller.
In some aspects, a general optimal control framework for designing control sequences can account for hardware control distortions while maintaining robustness to environmental noise. The example techniques described here are demonstrated by presenting examples of robust quantum gates optimized in the presence of nonlinear distortions. In some examples, non-linear classical controllers do not incur additional computational cost for pulse engineering, enabling more powerful quantum devices.
The techniques described here can be used, in some instances, to coherently control the dynamics of quantum systems, such as, for example, quantum computers, actuators, and sensors that push beyond the capabilities of classical computation and metrology. For instance, quantum computation has presented a compelling application for quantum control, as high-fidelity control can be used to implement quantum information processors that achieve fault-tolerance. As quantum information processors and other quantum devices continue to grow in size and complexity, the requirements of classical control hardware also increase in some instances. This can produce situations with a trade-off between hardware response simplicity and overall hardware capability.
In some contexts, the performance of numerically-optimized quantum gates in laboratory applications strongly depends on the response of the classical electronics used to apply the control sequence. Classical hardware models can be included in pulse-finding algorithms such that the produced control sequences are tailored to work robustly for the intended hardware controllers. Such a framework can, in some cases, natively incorporate nonlinear and non-invertible hardware behaviour, and allow for robustness against uncertainties and errors in parameters describing the hardware.
Models of linear distortions of a control sequence, such as those arising from finite bandwidth of the classical control hardware, may be integrated into optimal control theory (OCT) algorithms. Further, such algorithms can be modified to admit hardware models that are non-invertible or non-linear, allowing the experimenter to increase or maximize control efficiency and measurement sensitivity by improving hardware performance without sacrificing the ability to perform robust, high-fidelity quantum control.
In some implementations, a control framework can integrate the system-apparatus dynamics and model hardware components explicitly, such that their effect on a quantum system can be computed and compensated for using numerical optimal control theory (OCT) algorithms to optimize or otherwise improve control sequences. For instance, control sequences designed using OCT algorithms, such as the GRadient Ascent Pulse Engineering (GRAPE) algorithm, can be modified such that they are made robust to a wide variety of field inhomogenities, pulse errors and noise processes. The control framework can also be used in other applications and other protocols.
In some aspects, a control framework can be described generally without making assumptions about the device of interest, so that results may be broadly applicable to a wide range of quantum devices. The theory can be applied to any linear distortion, and we demonstrate with numerics how nonlinearities in control hardware may be included. As an example, we derive high-fidelity control pulses for strongly-driven superconducting resonators exhibiting non-linear kinetic inductance, that are robust to uncertainty in the amount of non-linearity present. While the control framework applies generally to a wide range of quantum control modalities, superconducting resonators serve well as an illustrative test-bed, having found significant recent application in pulsed electron spin resonance (ESR) and circuit QED to increase induction measurement sensitivity and provide an interface for microwave photon quantum memories.
In some aspects, a control framework can be described in the context of controlling a quantum system that has a system Hamiltonian
where H0 is the internal Hamiltonian and {Hl}l=1L are the control Hamiltonians. The envelopes {ql(t)}l=1L, can be selected such that at time T, the total unitary Utarget is effected. In some implementations, the control framework is also compatible with similar problems such as state to state transfers, expectation values over static distributions, open system maps, etc.
In the example shown in
In some examples, the quantum system 106 includes a spin system (e.g., a spin ensemble or another type of spin system) that includes multiple spins 140. In such examples, the control signal 105 can be a pulse train 130 generated by a resonator circuit 120 in the control system 104. The input signal received by the control system 104 can be, for example, one or more voltage signals that corresponds to a pulse sequence 118 provided by the control sequence design system 102.
In the example shown in
In some implementations, the data processor(s) in the control sequence design system 102 can access the quantum system model 110, the distortion model 112 and the target operations 114 and generate the control sequence 103. For example, the optimization engine 116 can include computer code that is executed by the data processor(s) to produce the pulse sequence 118 based on the quantum system model 110, the distortion model 112, the target operations 114, and other inputs.
In some instances, the control sequence design system 102 defines the parameters of the control sequence 103 such that the control sequence 103 will cause the control system 104 to produce a control signal 105 that performs the target operation on the quantum system 106. For example, the parameters of the control sequence 103 can include the parameters (e.g., duration, power, phase, etc.) of individual pulses in the pulse sequence 118, and the parameters of the pulse sequence 118 define the voltage signals delivered to the control system 104. In response to receiving the voltage signals, the resonator circuit 120 can produce the pulse train 130 that is experienced by the spins 140, and the spins 140 evolve under the pulse train 130 in a manner that corresponds to the target operations 114.
In some cases, the quantum system model 110 includes a control parameter that represents the control signal 105. In the example shown, the quantum system model 110 can be or include the Hamiltonian H (t) (e.g., the example Hamiltonian in Equation 1 or another Hamiltonian), and the control parameter in the quantum system model 110 can be the magnetic field parameter (a). Other types of control parameters may be used.
In some implementations, the distortion model 112 represents a nonlinear relationship between the control signal experienced by the quantum system 106 and the input signal received by the control system 104. In the example shown, the distortion model 112 represents the nonlinear relationship between the pulse sequence 118 produced by the control sequence design system 102 and the pulse train 130 produced by the control system 104. The nonlinear relationship can be caused, for example, by one or more components of the control system 104. For instance, the control system 104 may include classical hardware components (e.g., one or more components of the resonator circuit 120, an amplifier 122, a mixer 124, etc.) that cause nonlinearities at least in certain operating regimes.
In some examples, the control system 104 includes a superconducting resonator device that has a linear operating regime and a nonlinear operating regime, and the nonlinear relationship between the input signal received by the control system 104 and the control signal 105 produced by the control system 104 occurs when operating the superconducting resonator device in the nonlinear operating regime. For instance, the pulse sequence 118 can be applied to the spins 140 by operating the superconducting resonator device in its nonlinear operating regime. In such examples, the distortion model 112 accounts for the nonlinear dynamics of the resonator circuit 120 in the nonlinear operating regime. In some examples, the distortion model 112 accounts for nonlinear effects from other hardware (e.g. the amplifier 122, the mixer 124, etc.) in the control system 104. The nonlinear relationship represented by the distortion model 112 can arise due to classical (i.e., non-quantum) phenomena that occur in the resonator circuit 120 or other classical hardware components of the control system 104.
In some implementations, the optimization engine 116 generates the control sequence 103 based on one or more algorithms that begin with an initial set of parameters (e.g., an initial “guess”) and iteratively modifies the set of parameters until reaching a termination condition. For instance, the termination condition can be or include a number of iterations executed by the algorithm, a number of pulses in a pulse sequence, a threshold (maximum or minimum) duration of pulses in a pulse sequence, a threshold (maximum or minimum) duration of the control sequence, a threshold (maximum or minimum) for one or more quality criteria, or a combination of these. The quality criteria can include one or more objective functions that are improved or optimized by the optimization engine 116 based on the target operation 114. For instance, the optimization functions can include the fidelity between a simulated operation and a target unitary operation, the fidelity between a simulated quantum state and a target quantum state, or a combination of these and other types of optimization functions.
In some implementations, the optimization engine 116 generates the control sequence 103 using optimal control theory to find control sequence parameters that optimize an objective function under constraints defined by the quantum system model 110, the distortion model 112, the target operations 114, and possibly other constraints. As an example, the Gradient Assent Pulse Engineering (GRAPE) algorithm provides a framework for using optimal control theory to generate pulse sequences for magnetic resonance applications. The framework provided by the GRAPE algorithm or another optimal control theory algorithm can be modified to include the distortion model 112 that accounts for non-linear dynamics in the control system 104, and possibly other types of models and related information.
In the example shown, the functions {q1(t)}l=1L seen by the quantum system represent a distorted version of what was input to the classical hardware. In a numerical description, the time domain can be discretized and relevant hardware can be modeled by a discretized distortion operator. Here, the discretized distortion operator is a function g:RNRK→RMRL which takes an input pulse sequence, {right arrow over (p)}, with some associated time step dt, and outputs a distorted version of the pulse, {right arrow over (q)}=g({right arrow over (p)}), with an associated time step Here, the vector {right arrow over (p)} represents the pulse as generated by the control sequence design system 102, and the vector {right arrow over (q)} represents the pulse generating the Hamiltonian seen by the quantum system 106, as illustrated in
The integers N and M represent the number of input and output time steps respectively, and K and L represent the number of input and output control fields respectively. In the case of on-resonant quadrature control of a qubit, K=L=2. In this discussion, we omit subscripts on the time steps dt and for notational simplicity; uniform time discretization is not required. In some cases, the condition <dt allows for an accurate simulation of the quantum system. The condition M·=N·dt need not hold, for example, M·>N·dt may be useful when the distortion has a finite ringdown time.
The discretized distortion operator g can often be derived from a continuous distortion operator f: L1(R, RK)→L1(R, RL) which takes a continuous input pulse α(t) and outputs a distorted pulse β(t)=f[α](t). The discretized version can be obtained by composing f on either side by a discretization and dediscretization operator, g=f1∘f∘f2.
In some examples, conventional techniques from optimal control theory can be modified to include the distortion operator g. For instance, consider the unitary objective function,
used in the GRAPE algorithm, where d is the Hilbert space dimension, used to normalize the objective function to the unit interval. Penalties can be added to this basic objective function in order to demand that the solution admit certain properties. For instance, penalty functions have been used to ensure robustness to control noise and limited pulse fluence or to ensure that undesired subspaces are avoided.
In some implementations, the effect of control hardware can be incorporated by modifying the objective function to compose with the distortion operator,
Φg[{right arrow over (p)}]=Φ∘g({right arrow over (p)}). (3)
Using the multivariable chain rule, we compute the gradient of Φg to be
∇{right arrow over (p)}(Φg)=Vg({right arrow over (p)})(Φ)·J{right arrow over (p)}(g) (4)
where the dot represents a contraction over the indices m and l, and where J{right arrow over (p)}(g) is the Jacobian of g at {right arrow over (p)}. Though evaluating ∇g({right arrow over (p)})(Φ) can be accomplished by simulating the action of M×L pulses, the GRAPE algorithm provides an expression for this gradient in terms of the timestep unitaries that are already computed,
where
Pm:=(Πi=m+1MUu†)Utarget,
Xm:=Πi=m1Ui
and where
Ui({right arrow over (q)})=exp(−iδt[H0+Σl=1Lqm,lHl]) (7).
Therefore if we can compute the Jacobian J{right arrow over (p)}(g), we can then compute the total gradient of Φ. In some cases, the rest of the algorithm can follow, for example, as in the conventional GRAPE algorithm. Since the cost of evaluating g will typically not grow more than polynomially with the number of qubits, the computational cost of executing the algorithm can effectively remain unchanged from the conventional GRAPE algorithm, as it is still dominated by the cost of computing the M matrix exponentials.
Although the GRAPE algorithm is described as an example routine for improving or optimizing the objective function, this choice is based largely on the favourable convergence properties of the algorithm, and does not prevent the use of a different routine. In particular, GRAPE is a greedy algorithm which attempts to find an optimum closest to the initial value by choosing a direction related to the steepest uphill slope. Global optimizers such as Nelder-Mead, genetic algorithms, or hybrid gradient algorithms could be used without modification by substituting the usual objective function, Φ, with the distortion modified objective function, Φg. Such routines may be useful, for instance, in cases where the control landscape is known to be saturated with suboptimal maxima. Gradient-free methods may be advantageous, for instance, in cases where it is difficult or overly expensive to compute the Jacobian tensor of Φg.
Making use of the abstract formalism described above, our first example is the continuous distortion operator given by the convolution with an L×K kernel ϕ(t),
β(t)=f(α)(t)=(ϕ*α)(t)=∫−∞∞ϕ(t−τ)·α(t)dτ. (8)
The convolution kernel ϕ can model distortions that can be described by a linear differential equation, such as a simple exponential rise time, control line crosstalk, or the transfer function of the control hardware. We compute the discretized distortion operator to be
where we see that it acts as a linear map,
{right arrow over (q)}=g({right arrow over (p)})={tilde over (ϕ)}·{right arrow over (p)}, (10)
where we are contracting over the n and k indices with the components of the tensor {tilde over (ϕ)} given by the integrals
[{tilde over (ϕ)}]m,l,n,k=∫(n-1)dtndtϕl,k((m−½)δt−τ)dτ. (11)
In this example, the Jacobian matrix can be given by J{right arrow over (p)}(g)={tilde over (ϕ)} which is independent of the pulse {right arrow over (p)}. Examples of specific linear distortions making use of this formula include a resonator or cavity with a large quality factor Q, and others. As a specific example, a resonator or cavity with a large quality factor Q can store energy for times that are long compared to the time steps that are used in pulse design. If this effect is not included in optimization by integrating the distortion differential equation for a sufficient period, then the integrated action of the pulse on the quantum system may not be accurate. This can be dealt with by defining the image of the distortion operator to represent a longer time interval than the domain, but this may be inconvenient in experimental practice (e.g., where there is a need to turn off a pulse quickly). An alternative is to actively compensate for the ringdown introduced by a large Q, and to demand that the distorted pulse goes to zero at a given time step.
For a resonator with only linear elements, this problem has been solved by appealing to the transfer function h:RM→RK,
g[{right arrow over (p)}]=f1[f2({right arrow over (p)})*h] (12)
where å is the convolution operator. For the case M=K=1, the transfer function takes on the simple form
h(t)=Ae−t/τ
for some amplitude A and where τc=Q/ω0 is a time constant. In this case, an additional pulse segment, of amplitude
can be appended, where m is a time step index such that tm=tK.
In the nonlinear case, Q, co, and A are not constant, but depend on {right arrow over (p)}. One solution is to modify the performance functional to include the demand that the ringdown go to zero by defining
Φg′({right arrow over (p)}):=Φg({right arrow over (p)})−Ωg({right arrow over (p)})=(Φ−Ω)∘g. (15)
For ringdown compensation,
where m0 is the time step index at which we start demanding that the solution goes to zero. The derivatives of this function are found, such that {right arrow over (∇)}Φ′ is computed given {right arrow over (Π)}Φ and J(g). Since a solution that both has high fidelity with a unitary target and admits ringdown compensation can be hard to find in some instances, a ringdown-compensation method can be used to generate initial guesses which result in a small penalty Φg′({right arrow over (p)}).
Another solution is to include ringdown suppression in the distortion operator g itself. That is, given an input pulse {right arrow over (p)}, the forcing term a now includes not only steps taken directly from {right arrow over (p)}, but also additional steps which are chosen (according to the results from the next section) to eliminate the energy from the cavity in a short period of time. This technique was used in the examples described here.
Here, we derive a scheme to calculate the values of compensation steps to append to a pulse which acts to remove the energy from a resonator on a timescale shorter than the ringdown time. First, we write the equation of the circuit as
{dot over (x)}=Ax+αb (17)
where x is a vector of state variables for the circuit, A is a matrix describing the circuit without forcing, b is the forcing direction of the circuit, and α is a controllable scalar which sets the magnitude of the forcing. Here, we assume that we have already entered the frame rotating at the resonance frequency so that all quantities are complex, where real quantities correspond to in-phase components, and imaginary quantities correspond to quadrature components. Note that for a non-linear circuit, A will depend on the state of the system, that is, A=A(x). Moreover, α can be time dependent, α=α(t).
In some implementations, the objective is to start with an undistorted pulse po and append nrd steps of length dtrd to form the undistorted pulse {right arrow over (p)}=[{right arrow over (p)}0,{right arrow over (p)}rd], which causes the distorted pulse g({right arrow over (p)}) to have near zero amplitude at the end of the last time step. To simplify the task, we can make the approximation that A remains constant during each of the compensation steps, taking on a value corresponding to the state x at the end of the previous time step.
The general solution to Equation 17 is given by
x(t)=etAx0+∫0tα(s)e(t−s)Abds. (18)
Substituting a continuous forcing solution and translating the time coordinate so that t=0 corresponds to the transition from the (n−1)th to the nth and gives the solution
x(t)=etAx0+etA[∫0te−sA({tilde over (p)}n-1+({tilde over (p)}n−{tilde over (p)}n-1)(1−e−s/τ
in the region t∈[0,dtrd]. In some instances, we wish to drive the state of the system, x, to 0. Therefore, we can demand that at time t=dtrd, x becomes some fraction of its value at the end of the (n−1)th step, so that x(dtrd)=rx0 for some r∈[0,1]. We can refrain from setting r=0 when x is large because if x changes too much in the time span dtrd our approximation of constant A will break down. In cases where only the value of {tilde over (p)}n can be changed, the equality x(dtrd)=rx0 will not in general be achievable. Thus, we may instead minimize the quantity
β({tilde over (p)}n)=∥P(x(dtrd)−rx0)∥2 (20)
where P is a positive semi-definite matrix which relates the importance of minimizing certain state variables over others. This quantity can be rewritten as
β({tilde over (p)}n)=∥w−{tilde over (p)}nv∥2
w=P[(etA−rI)x0+{tilde over (p)}n-1(A+I/τr)−1(etA−e−t/τ
v=P[(A+I/τr)−1(etA−e−t/τ
This form shows that β({tilde over (p)}n) is minimized when {tilde over (p)}n is chosen to be the complex projection amplitude of the vector w onto v:
For reference, note that in the limit τr→0, the vectors v and w simplify to
w=P(etA−rI)x0
v=PA−1(etA−I)b. (23)
In some cases, if there are uncertainties in any parameters {right arrow over (a)} describing the convolution kernel, so that ϕ(t)=ϕ[{right arrow over (a)}](t), then the objective function used in the optimization routine can be taken as a weighted sum,
where g[{right arrow over (a)}]({right arrow over (p)})={tilde over (ϕ)}[{right arrow over (a)}]·{right arrow over (p)} and the probability distribution Pr({right arrow over (a)}) describes the parameter uncertainty. In this way, the control sequence design system may attempt to find a solution which performs well over all probable parameter values. As a concrete example, if τrise were the characteristic rise time of a control amplitude, we could have {right arrow over (a)}=(τrise), and generate a pulse which is robust to variations in this time scale. By linearity, the Jacobian tensor of Φg<{right arrow over (a)}>, is the weighted sum of the Jacobian tensors J{right arrow over (p)}(g[{right arrow over (a)}]). In some cases, incorporating distributions of parameters in the distortion operator also applies to non-linear device hardware.
As another example, we consider a quantum system being controlled by a tuned and matched resonator circuit with nonlinear circuit elements. For this example,
In the example shown in
The example inductor 204 is configured to produce a magnetic field that interacts with a spin system. For instance, the inductor 204 can represent a component of an ESR resonator device that generates a microwave-frequency electromagnetic field that controls an electron spin system in an ESR sample, or the inductor 204 can represent an NMR coil that generates a radio-frequency electromagnetic field that controls a nuclear spin system in an NMR sample. Other types of inductors and cavities, and other types of qubit systems can be used.
The circuit model 200 can be used to compute the control signal generated by the resonator circuit in response to a particular voltage signal (e.g., a particular pulse sequence or other type of voltage signal). For example, the voltage source 201 can be modeled according to a pulse sequence, and the resulting current through the inductor 204 and other components of the circuit model 200 can be computed.
The example circuit model 200 shown in
In some cases, the circuit model 200 is used to generate a distortion model that represents a nonlinear relationship between an input signal provided by the voltage source 201 and a control signal produced by the inductor 204. For example, the system of differential equations in Equation 26 provides an example of a nonlinear relationship between a voltage signal and inductance of the inductor 204 that produces the control signal to control the quantum system.
This example has a form that is general enough to accurately describe the majority of resonators currently used in spin resonance experiments, including non-linear resonators. Moreover, arbitrarily-complex circuits with additional poles could be incorporated, for instance, by finding their circuit equations with a standard application of Kirchhoff's laws, resulting in a higher order equation in place of Equation 26.
Nonlinear superconducting resonators are used in a variety of applications, including circuit QED for quantum information processing and quantum memories, microwave kinetic inductance detectors for astronomy, and pulsed electron spin resonance. Often, these devices are operated in their linear regime to avoid complications resulting from nonlinearity. Avoiding nonlinearities can require reducing input power, leading to longer control sequences that reduce the number of quantum operations that can be performed before the system decoheres. Additionally, limiting input power can remove the natural robustness of high-power sequences to uncertainties in the environment achieved by strongly modulating the quantum system.
If the circuit were linear, the distortion could be modelled as a convolution ϕ* as discussed above. However, with nonlinear circuit elements present, we can numerically solve the circuit's differential equation to compute the distorted pulse.
As a first demonstration, we consider a qubit system. This example isolates the change in a control landscape induced by the non-linear distortion operator, and control landscapes generally scale well with Hilbert space dimension. In this example, a qubit is a near-resonance spin system whose Hamiltonian, in the rotating frame after invoking the rotating wave approximation, is
where δω and κ represent off-resonance and control power errors, respectively.
In some implementations, the time evolution of the circuit represented by the example circuit model 200 in
where the nonlinearities arise when the inductance, L, and resistance, R, are functions of the current passing through them. In the case of kinetic inductance, these nonlinearities take on the form
L=L(IL)=L0(1+αL|IL|2)
R=R(IR)=R0(1+αR|IR|η) (27)
where αL, αR and η are constants. Kinetic inductance may lead to a reduction in the circuit resonance frequency, coupling, and quality factor with increasing power as shown, for example, in
In the example plot 300A shown in
As shown in
In the example shown in
Since the Hamiltonian in Equation 25 is written in a frame rotating at the circuit resonance frequency in the linear regime, it is convenient to write the differential equation in this frame. To this end, with the differential Equation 26 shorthanded as
the complex change of variables can be introduced as
{right arrow over (x)}(t)=e−iω
In this new frame, since
B({right arrow over (y)}(t))=B({right arrow over (x)}(t)),
the dynamics become
{dot over ({right arrow over (x)})}=(B({right arrow over (x)}(t))−iω0I){right arrow over (x)}(t)+{tilde over (V)}s(t){right arrow over (b)}≡A({right arrow over (x)}(t)){right arrow over (x)}(t)+{tilde over (V)}s(t){right arrow over (b)} (28)
where the rotating wave approximation has been invoked, and {tilde over (V)}s(t) is the rotating version of Vs(t). Now the real and imaginary parts of the complex current in the rotating frame, ĨL(t)=e−iω
ωx(t)∝ Re [ĨL(t)] and ωy(t)∝ Im [ĨL(t)]. (29)
In some instances, to compute the distortion {right arrow over (q)}=g({right arrow over (p)}) caused by the resonator circuit, the circuit's input voltage {tilde over (V)}s(t) can be set to be the piecewise-constant function with amplitudes coming from {right arrow over (p)}. To improve stiffness conditions, a small finite risetime may be added to the forcing term {tilde over (V)}s(t), which is equivalent to adding a low-pass filter to the ideal voltage source in the circuit. We can now solve the Equations 28 for ĨL(t) using the NDSolve function in Mathematica 10, interpolate the results, and resample at a rate Δt to determine the distorted pulse {right arrow over (q)}.
In some instances, when the distortion is non-linear, the Jacobian of g will not be constant with respect to the input pulse {right arrow over (p)}. However, the accuracy of the Jacobian can be compromised in favour of taking a larger number of ascent steps that are still generally uphill by using the approximation
These quantities may be precomputed prior to gradient ascent and therefore only add a constant to the computation time. Exact partial derivatives may be computed for a cost that scales as K·N and whose implementation can be highly parallelized. In some examples, partial derivatives may be computed in this context using techniques outlined in the following discussion. To populate elements of the Jacobian tensor J
can be approximated, where g is the distortion corresponding to the non-linear resonator circuit. One example technique for approximating such partial derivatives would be to use a central difference formula
where ēn,k is the unit vector in the {n,k} direction, and ε>0 is a small number that is greater than the precision of the DE solver. Such an approximation would utilize 2NK calls to the DE solver. In some cases, the approximation is numerically unstable as it involves the difference of two numerical DE solutions whose forcing terms are only slightly different; e can be carefully tuned or may have no reliable value, for instance, when searching for high fidelity pulses.
If we consider the approximation
g({right arrow over (p)}±ε{right arrow over (e)}n,k)≈g({right arrow over (p)})±g(ε{right arrow over (e)}n,k)
the central difference reduces to
which is the approximation provided above in Equation 30. This approximation does not depend on the current pulse {right arrow over (p)} and can therefore be pre-computed eliminating the 2NK calls to g (i.e. DE solver calls) per ascension step.
An exact method to compute these partial derivatives is derived below, which will take N*K+1 calls to the DE solver to compute the entire Jacobian matrix. Begin with the resonator differential equation
{dot over (x)}=A(x)x+α(t)b. (34)
As discussed, we have
[g({right arrow over (p)})]m,1=κ Re ĨL(tm)≡h1(x(tm))
[g({right arrow over (p)})]m,2=κ Im ĨL(tm)≡h2(x(tm)) (35)
where tm=(m−½)δt. Thus, in some instances, the difficult part of computing
is computing
or more generally
We derive a set of K*N=2N secondary partial differential vector equations whose time-sampled solutions produce the partial derivatives. To do this we take a partial derivative
that gives, as the lth component of the (n,k)th equation,
where Einstein summation notation is used and (in the case τr=0),
Denoting
and commuting the partial derivatives, the components of Equation 36 can be re-written as the non-linear vector PDE
{dot over (y)}n,k=[A′(x)+A(x)]yn,k+Tn,k(t)b. (39)
Therefore, once x(t) has been computed, it can be plugged into each of the DEs for yn,k, the DEs can be solved with the initial condition yn,k((n−1)dt)=0 (by causality yn,k=0 for t<(n−1)dt), and the exact formula
is produced, where hl was defined implicitly in Equation 35 and each
can be computed.
If we take the Taylor series of A(x) about x=0, we have
A(x)=A0+A1(x)+A2(x)+ (41)
where each Ap is a matrix polynomial in the coordinates of x with all terms having order exactly p. The 0th order approximation of Equation 39 gives
{dot over (y)}n,k=A0yn,k+Tn,k(t)b. (42)
In this form, we see that yn,k is just the same as x where the DE for x, Equation 39, has been linearized and the forcing is the top hat
Tn,k:yn,k=x|A=A
In some instances, the linearization condition A=A0 is approximately the same as the guarantee ∥A(x)−A0∥=1, which can be met by setting α=εTn,k with ε chosen so that
Therefore, the zeroth order approximation to the Jacobian is
which provides another derivation of Equation 33.
U=π/2)x
based on the distortion operator derived from the example circuit model 200 of
L=100 pH(1+αL|IL|2)
R=0.01Ω(1+αR|IL|ηR)
RL=50 Ω,
Cl=2.49821 pF
Cm=3.58224 fF
αL=0.05 A−2
αR=0.001 A−2
ηR=0.7
ω0=10.0622 GHz.
In the example shown in
In the example shown in
Having demonstrated the ability to find a robust gate in the presence of a non-linear distortion operator, we consider the effect it has on the control landscape. In the presence of a non-trivial distortion operator, finding optimal solutions could be more expensive, measured in the number of steps taken by the optimizer. Therefore, a trade-off between computational cost and gate time length could reasonably be expected. We perform a numerical study to examine this relationship in an example context.
In the numerical study, the allowed input power to the resonator used by the optimization engine was bound by 10 different voltages ranging from 1V to 10 V, where 1V is on the edge of the linear regime, and 10 V is highly non-linear. For each of these bounds, we attempt to compute a pulse having a fidelity of at least F=0.99 for a target operation corresponding to a π/2 rotation about the x-axis with 160 pulse times, and using a different random initial guess each time. The total length of the pulse was set to
where fs.s. is the steady state driving frequency of the resonator at the corresponding voltage bound. The number of time steps was held constant at N=16 for each trial. The gradient approximation from Equation 30 was used. On each trial, we count the number of times the distortion function g was called. The results are shown in
At 502, initial pulse parameters are obtained. The initial pulse parameters correspond to an initial series of values for a pulse sequence. The initial set of values can be a random or other type of “guess,” or the initial set of values can be based on another engineered pulse, or other factors. At 504, a distortion model for the control system is obtained. For instance, the distortion model may correspond to the resonator circuit or other control hardware in the control system. In the example shown, the distortion model includes a non-linear relationship between the input signal delivered to the control system and the output signal produced by the control system.
At 506, compensation pulse parameters are obtained. At 508, the system dynamics are integrated using the compensation pulse parameters and pulse parameters. At 510, a performance functional evaluation is obtained. At 512, derivatives are calculated based on the distortion operator and the performance functional evaluation. At 514, pulse parameters are updated based on the calculated derivatives. The operations shown in
At 516, the pulse sequence produced by updating the pulse parameters at 514 is applied to the spin system. For instance, the pulse sequence can be applied by delivering an input signal to the control system, causing the control system to generate a control signal that acts on the spin system. The input signal delivered to the control system can be, for example, a series of values or other data representing the series of pulse phases and amplitudes in the pulse sequence.
In conclusion, we have presented an optimization framework that permits the design of robust quantum control sequences that account for general simulatable distortions by classical control hardware. We have demonstrated that even when distortions are non-linear with respect to the input—using the particular example of a non-linear resonator circuit—robust quantum control may still be achieved, and searching through the control landscape does not necessarily become more difficult. Thus, classical control devices may be operated in their high power regime to permit fast high fidelity quantum operations, increasing the number of gates that can be performed within the decoherence time of the quantum system.
Some of the subject matter and operations described in this specification can be implemented in digital electronic circuitry, or in computer software, firmware, or hardware, including the structures disclosed in this specification and their structural equivalents, or in combinations of one or more of them. Some of the subject matter described in this specification can be implemented as one or more computer programs, i.e., one or more modules of computer program instructions, encoded on a computer storage medium for execution by, or to control the operation of, data-processing apparatus. A computer storage medium can be, or can be included in, a computer-readable storage device, a computer-readable storage substrate, a random or serial access memory array or device, or a combination of one or more of them. Moreover, while a computer storage medium is not a propagated signal, a computer storage medium can be a source or destination of computer program instructions encoded in an artificially generated propagated signal. The computer storage medium can also be, or be included in, one or more separate physical components or media (e.g., multiple CDs, disks, or other storage devices).
The term “data-processing apparatus” encompasses all kinds of apparatus, devices, and machines for processing data, including by way of example a programmable processor, a computer, a system on a chip, or multiple ones, or combinations, of the foregoing. The apparatus can include special purpose logic circuitry, e.g., an FPGA (field programmable gate array) or an ASIC (application specific integrated circuit). The apparatus can also include, in addition to hardware, code that creates an execution environment for the computer program in question, e.g., code that constitutes processor firmware, a protocol stack, a database management system, an operating system, a cross-platform runtime environment, a virtual machine, or a combination of one or more of them.
A computer program (also known as a program, software, software application, script, or code) can be written in any form of programming language, including compiled or interpreted languages, declarative or procedural languages. A computer program may, but need not, correspond to a file in a file system. A program can be stored in a portion of a file that holds other programs or data (e.g., one or more scripts stored in a markup language document), in a single file dedicated to the program, or in multiple coordinated files (e.g., files that store one or more modules, sub programs, or portions of code). A computer program can be deployed to be executed on one computer or on multiple computers that are located at one site or distributed across multiple sites and interconnected by a communication network.
Some of the processes and logic flows described in this specification can be performed by one or more programmable processors executing one or more computer programs to perform actions by operating on input data and generating output. The processes and logic flows can also be performed by, and apparatus can also be implemented as, special purpose logic circuitry, e.g., an FPGA (field programmable gate array) or an ASIC (application specific integrated circuit).
Processors suitable for the execution of a computer program include, by way of example, both general and special purpose microprocessors, and processors of any kind of digital computer. Generally, a processor will receive instructions and data from a read-only memory or a random-access memory or both. A computer can include a processor that performs actions in accordance with instructions, and one or more memory devices that store the instructions and data. A computer may also include, or be operatively coupled to receive data from or transfer data to, or both, one or more mass storage devices for storing data, e.g., magnetic disks, magneto optical disks, or optical disks. However, a computer need not have such devices. Devices suitable for storing computer program instructions and data include all forms of non-volatile memory, media and memory devices, including by way of example semiconductor memory devices (e.g., EPROM, EEPROM, flash memory devices, and others), magnetic disks (e.g., internal hard disks, removable disks, and others), magneto optical disks, and CD-ROM and DVD-ROM disks. In some cases, the processor and the memory can be supplemented by, or incorporated in, special purpose logic circuitry.
To provide for interaction with a user, operations can be implemented on a computer having a display device (e.g., a monitor, or another type of display device) for displaying information to the user and a keyboard and a pointing device (e.g., a mouse, a trackball, a tablet, a touch-sensitive screen, or another type of pointing device) by which the user can provide input to the computer. Other kinds of devices can be used to provide for interaction with a user as well; for example, feedback provided to the user can be any form of sensory feedback, e.g., visual feedback, auditory feedback, or tactile feedback; and input from the user can be received in any form, including acoustic, speech, or tactile input. In addition, a computer can interact with a user by sending documents to and receiving documents from a device that is used by the user; for example, by sending web pages to a web browser on a user's client device in response to requests received from the web browser.
A computer system may include a single computing device, or multiple computers that operate in proximity or generally remote from each other and typically interact through a communication network. Examples of communication networks include a local area network (“LAN”) and a wide area network (“WAN”), an inter-network (e.g., the Internet), a network comprising a satellite link, and peer-to-peer networks (e.g., ad hoc peer-to-peer networks). A relationship of client and server may arise by virtue of computer programs running on the respective computers and having a client-server relationship to each other.
Some aspects of what is described above include a control method for controlling a spin system. Some aspects of what is described above include a system that includes a spin system, a control system and a computing system. In some aspects, a spin system includes spins that respond to a control signal generated by a resonator circuit in a control system. The resonator circuit is configured to generate the control signal in response to a voltage signal received by the control system. A spin system model represents the spin system and includes a control parameter representing the control signal. A distortion model represents a non-linear relationship between the control signal and the voltage signal. A target operation to be applied to one or more of the spins by operation of the resonator circuit is defined. A computing system generates a pulse sequence that includes a sequence of values for the voltage signal, based on the target operation, the spin system model and the distortion model. The resonator circuit applies the pulse sequence to the spin system.
Implementations of these and other aspects may include one or more of the following features. The resonator circuit includes a superconducting resonator device, the distortion model represents a non-linear operating regime of the superconducting resonator device, and the pulse sequence is applied to the spin system by operation of the resonator device in the non-linear operating regime. The control system includes the resonator circuit and other hardware, and the non-linear relationship represented by the distortion model accounts for non-linear effects from the resonator circuit and the other hardware. The distortion model is generated from a resonator circuit model that represents the resonator circuit. The resonator circuit model includes a system of differential equations that defines a non-linear relationship between the voltage signal and an inductance in the resonator circuit. The control parameter can be the amplitude of a magnetic field generated by the resonator circuit. The pulse sequence is generated using optimal control theory to iteratively modify the sequence of values. An uncertainty model represents uncertainty in a parameter of the resonator circuit, and the pulse sequence is generated based on the target operation, the spin system model, the distortion model and the uncertainty model. The resonator circuit can be a classical resonator circuit, and the non-linear relationship can represent a classical phenomenon. The control system comprises the resonator circuit, a mixer and an amplifier.
While this specification contains many details, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of what may be claimed, but rather as descriptions of features specific to particular examples. Certain features that are described in this specification in the context of separate implementations can also be combined. Conversely, various features that are described in the context of a single implementation can also be implemented in multiple embodiments separately or in any suitable subcombination.
A number of embodiments have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications can be made. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/328,951, filed January 25.2017, which is a national stage entry of PCT/CA2015/000500, filed Sep. 23, 2015, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/054,630, filed on Sep. 24, 2014, which Each of the above-referenced priority documents is hereby incorporated by reference.
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20070052416 | Bottcher et al. | Mar 2007 | A1 |
20130090884 | Glaser et al. | Apr 2013 | A1 |
20130096698 | Ulyanov | Apr 2013 | A1 |
20140264285 | Chow | Sep 2014 | A1 |
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20150358022 | McDermott, III | Dec 2015 | A1 |
20160041536 | Benosman et al. | Feb 2016 | A1 |
20170214410 | Hincks et al. | Jul 2017 | A1 |
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2910540 | Nov 2014 | CA |
0895092 | Feb 1999 | EP |
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20200274541 A1 | Aug 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62054630 | Sep 2014 | US |
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Parent | 15328951 | US | |
Child | 16809944 | US |