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K-sparse Pure State Tomography with Phase Estimation

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arxiv 2111.04359 v2 pith:EBXTHRKQ submitted 2021-11-08 quant-ph cs.CCphysics.optics

K-sparse Pure State Tomography with Phase Estimation

classification quant-ph cs.CCphysics.optics
keywords quantumphasestateoperatorpurevertalgorithmestimation
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Quantum state tomography (QST) for reconstructing pure states requires exponentially increasing resources and measurements with the number of qubits by using state-of-the-art quantum compressive sensing (CS) methods. In this article, QST reconstruction for any pure state composed of the superposition of $K$ different computational basis states of $n$ qubits in a specific measurement set-up, i.e., denoted as $K$-sparse, is achieved without any initial knowledge and with quantum polynomial-time complexity of resources based on the assumption of the existence of polynomial size quantum circuits for implementing exponentially large powers of a specially designed unitary operator. The algorithm includes $\mathcal{O}(2 \, / \, \vert c_{k}\vert^2)$ repetitions of conventional phase estimation algorithm depending on the probability $\vert c_{k}\vert^2$ of the least possible basis state in the superposition and $\mathcal{O}(d \, K \,(log K)^c)$ measurement settings with conventional quantum CS algorithms independent from the number of qubits while dependent on $K$ for constant $c$ and $d$. Quantum phase estimation algorithm is exploited based on the favorable eigenstructure of the designed operator to represent any pure state as a superposition of eigenvectors. Linear optical set-up is presented for realizing the special unitary operator which includes beam splitters and phase shifters where propagation paths of single photon are tracked with which-path-detectors. Quantum circuit implementation is provided by using only CNOT, phase shifter and $- \pi \, / \, 2$ rotation gates around X-axis in Bloch sphere, i.e., $R_{X}(- \pi \, / \, 2)$, allowing to be realized in NISQ devices. Open problems are discussed regarding the existence of the unitary operator and its practical circuit implementation.

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