Optimized pulses for the control of uncertain qubits

Matthew D. Grace, Jason M. Dominy, Wayne M. Witzel, and Malcolm S. Carroll
Phys. Rev. A 85, 052313 – Published 18 May 2012

Abstract

Constructing high-fidelity control fields that are robust to control, system, and/or surrounding environment uncertainties is a crucial objective for quantum information processing. Using the two-state Landau-Zener model for illustrative simulations of a controlled qubit, we generate optimal controls for π/2 and π pulses and investigate their inherent robustness to uncertainty in the magnitude of the drift Hamiltonian. Next, we construct a quantum-control protocol to improve system-drift robustness by combining environment-decoupling pulse criteria and optimal control theory for unitary operations. By perturbatively expanding the unitary time-evolution operator for an open quantum system, previous analysis of environment-decoupling control pulses has calculated explicit control-field criteria to suppress environment-induced errors up to (but not including) third order from π/2 and π pulses. We systematically integrate this criteria with optimal control theory, incorporating an estimate of the uncertain parameter to produce improvements in gate fidelity and robustness, demonstrated via a numerical example based on double quantum dot qubits. For the qubit model used in this work, postfacto analysis of the resulting controls suggests that realistic control-field fluctuations and noise may contribute just as significantly to gate errors as system and environment fluctuations.

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  • Received 11 May 2011

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.85.052313

©2012 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Matthew D. Grace*

  • Department of Scalable & Secure Systems Research, Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, California 94550, USA

Jason M. Dominy

  • Program in Applied & Computational Mathematics, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA

Wayne M. Witzel

  • Department of Advanced Device Technologies, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87185, USA

Malcolm S. Carroll§

  • Department of Photonic Microsystem Technologies, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87185, USA

  • *mgrace@sandia.gov
  • Present address: Center for Quantum Information Science, and Technology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089, USA; jdominy@usc.edu
  • wwitzel@sandia.gov
  • §mscarro@sandia.gov

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Issue

Vol. 85, Iss. 5 — May 2012

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