Learning mixed quantum states in large-scale experiments

ORAL

Abstract

We present and test a protocol to learn the matrix-product operator (MPO) representation of an experimentally prepared quantum state. The protocol takes as input classical shadows corresponding to local randomized measurements and outputs the tensors of an MPO that maximizes a suitably defined fidelity with the experimental state. The tensor optimization is carried out sequentially, similarly to the well-known density matrix renormalization group algorithm. Our approach is provably efficient under certain technical conditions, which are expected to be met in short-range correlated states and in typical noisy experimental settings. Under the same conditions, we also provide an efficient scheme to estimate fidelities between the learned and the experimental states. We experimentally demonstrate our protocol by learning entangled quantum states of up to N = 96 qubits in a superconducting quantum processor. Our method upgrades classical shadows to large-scale quantum computation and simulation experiments.

Publication: Votto, Matteo, et al. "Learning mixed quantum states in large-scale experiments." arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.12550 (2025)

Presenters

  • Matteo Votto

    • MIT Center for Theoretical Physics

Authors

  • Matteo Votto

    • MIT Center for Theoretical Physics
  • Marko Ljubotina

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Cécilia Lancien

    • Université Grenoble-Alpes, CNRS, Institut Fourier
  • Ignacio Cirac

    • Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics
  • Peter Zoller

    • University of Innsbruck
  • Maksym Serbyn

    • Institute of Science and Technology Austria
  • Lorenzo Piroli

    • Università di Bologna
  • Benoit Vermersch

    • Université Grenoble-Alpes, Quobly