Abstract
Abstract
It is believed that one of the first useful applications for a quantum computer will be the preparation of groundstates of molecular Hamiltonians. A crucial task involving state preparation and readout is obtaining physical observables of such states, which are typically estimated using projective measurements on the qubits. At present, measurement data is costly and time-consuming to obtain on any quantum computing architecture, which has significant consequences for the statistical errors of estimators. In this paper, we adapt common neural network models (restricted Boltzmann machines and recurrent neural networks) to learn complex groundstate wavefunctions for several prototypical molecular qubit Hamiltonians from typical measurement data. By relating the accuracy ɛ of the reconstructed groundstate energy to the number of measurements, we find that using a neural network model provides a robust improvement over using single-copy measurement outcomes alone to reconstruct observables. This enhancement yields an asymptotic scaling near ɛ
−1 for the model-based approaches, as opposed to ɛ
−2 in the case of classical shadow tomography.
Funder
Mitacs
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Canada Research Chairs
New Frontiers in Research Fund
Institut Périmètre de physique théorique
Subject
Artificial Intelligence,Human-Computer Interaction,Software
Cited by
4 articles.
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