Permutationally Invariant Quantum State Tomography
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Permutationally invariant quantum state tomography (PI quantum state tomography) is a method for the partial determination of the state of a
quantum system Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistry, ...
consisting of many subsystems. In general, the number of parameters needed to describe the quantum mechanical state of a system consisting of N subsystems is increasing exponentially with N. For instance, for an N- qubit system, 2^N-2 real parameters are needed to describe the state vector of a pure state, or 2^ -1 real parameters are needed to describe the density matrix of a mixed state. '' Quantum state tomography'' is a method to determine all these parameters from a series of measurements on many independent and identically prepared systems. Thus, in the case of full quantum state tomography, the number of measurements needed scales exponentially with the number of particles or qubits. For large systems, the determination of the entire quantum state is no longer possible in practice and one is interested in methods that determine only a subset of the parameters necessary to characterize the quantum state that still contains important information about the state. Permutationally invariant quantum tomography is such a method. PI quantum tomography only measures \varrho_, the ''permutationally invariant part'' of the density matrix. For the procedure, it is sufficient to carry out ''local measurements'' on the subsystems. If the state is close to being permutationally invariant, which is the case in many practical situations, then \varrho_ is close to the density matrix of the system. Even if the state is not permutationally invariant, \varrho_ can still be used for entanglement detection and computing relevant operator expectations values. Thus, the procedure does not assume the permutationally invariance of the quantum state. The number of independent real parameters of \varrho_ for N qubits scales as \sim N^3. The number of local measurement settings scales as \sim N^2. Thus, permutationally invariant quantum tomography is considered manageable even for large N. In other words, permutationally invariant quantum tomography is considered ''scalable''. The method can be used, for example, for the reconstruction of the density matrices of systems with more than 10 particles, for photonic systems, for trapped cold ions or systems in cold atoms.


The permutationally invariant part of the density matrix

PI state tomography reconstructs the permutationally invariant part of the density matrix, which is defined as the equal mixture of the quantum states obtained after permuting the particles in all the possible ways :\varrho_=\frac \sum_k \Pi_k \varrho \Pi_k^\dagger, where \Pi_k denotes the ''k''th permutation. For instance, for N=2 we have two permutations. \Pi_1 leaves the order of the two particles unchanged. \Pi_2 exchanges the two particles. In general, for N particles, we have N! permutations. It is easy to see that \varrho_ is the density matrix that is obtained if the order of the particles is not taken into account. This corresponds to an experiment in which a subset of N particles is randomly selected from a larger ensemble. The state of this smaller group is of course permutationally invariant. The number of
degrees of freedom Degrees of freedom (often abbreviated df or DOF) refers to the number of independent variables or parameters of a thermodynamic system. In various scientific fields, the word "freedom" is used to describe the limits to which physical movement or ...
of \varrho_ scales polynomially with the number of particles. For a system of N qubits (spin- 1/2 particles) the number of real degrees of freedom is :\binom-1=\frac6(N^3+6N^2+11N).


The measurements needed to determine the permutationally invariant part of the density matrix

To determine these degrees of freedom, :\binom=\frac2=\frac1 2 (N^2+3N+2) ''local measurement settings'' are needed. Here, a local measurement settings means that the operator A_j is to be measured on each particle. By repeating the measurement and collecting enough data, all two-point, three-point and higher order correlations can be determined.


Efficient determination of a physical state

So far we have discussed that the number of measurements scales polynomially with the number of qubits. However, for using the method in practice, the entire tomographic procedure must be scalable. Thus, we need to store the state in the computer in a scalable way. Clearly, the straightforward way of storing the N-qubit state in a 2^N\times2^N density matrix is not scalable. However, \varrho_ is a blockdiagonal matrix due to its permutational invariance and thus it can be stored much more efficiently. Moreover, it is well known that due to statistical fluctuations and systematic errors the density matrix obtained from the measured state by linear inversion is not positive semidefinite and it has some negative eigenvalues. An important step in a typical tomography is fitting a physical, i. e., positive semidefinite density matrix on the tomographic data. This step often represents a bottleneck in the overall process in full state tomography. However, PI tomography, as we have just discussed, allows the density matrix to be stored much more efficiently, which also allows an efficient fitting using convex optimization, which also guarantees that the solution is a global optimum.


Characteristics of the method

PI tomography is commonly used in experiments involving permutationally invariant states. If the density matrix \varrho_ obtained by PI tomography is entangled, then density matrix of the system, \varrho is also entangled. For this reason, the usual methods for entanglement verification, such as
entanglement witness In quantum information theory, an entanglement witness is a functional which distinguishes a specific entangled state from separable ones. Entanglement witnesses can be linear or nonlinear functionals of the density matrix. If linear, then t ...
es or the Peres-Horodecki criterion, can be applied to \varrho_. Remarkably, the entanglement detection carried out in this way does not assume that the quantum system itself is permutationally invariant. Moreover, the expectation value of any permutaionally invariant operator is the same for \varrho and for \varrho_. Very relevant examples of such operators are projectors to symmetric states, such as the
Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger state In physics, in the area of quantum information theory, a Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger state (GHZ state) is a certain type of entangled quantum state that involves at least three subsystems (particle states, qubits, or qudits). It was first s ...
, the
W state The W state is an entangled quantum state of three qubits which in the bra-ket notation has the following shape : , \mathrm\rangle = \frac(, 001\rangle + , 010\rangle + , 100\rangle) and which is remarkable for representing a specific type of ...
and symmetric Dicke states. Thus, we can obtain the fidelity with respect to the above-mentioned quantum states as the expectation value of the corresponding projectors in the state \varrho_.


Links to other approaches

There are other approaches for tomography that need fewer measurements than full quantum state tomography. As we have discussed, PI tomography is typically most useful for quantum states that are close to being permutionally invariant. Compressed sensing is especially suited for low rank states. Matrix product state tomography is most suitable for, e.g.,
cluster state In quantum information and quantum computing, a cluster state is a type of highly entangled state of multiple qubits. Cluster states are generated in lattices of qubits with Ising type interactions. A cluster ''C'' is a connected subset of a ''d' ...
s and ground states of spin models. Permutationally invariant tomography can be combined with compressed sensing. In this case, the number of local measurement settings needed can even be smaller than for permutationally invariant tomography.{{cite journal , last1=Schwemmer , first1=Christian , last2=Tóth , first2=Géza , last3=Niggebaum , first3=Alexander , last4=Moroder , first4=Tobias , last5=Gross , first5=David , last6=Gühne , first6=Otfried , last7=Weinfurter , first7=Harald , title=Experimental Comparison of Efficient Tomography Schemes for a Six-Qubit State , journal=Physical Review Letters , date=24 July 2014 , volume=113 , issue=4 , pages=040503 , doi=10.1103/PhysRevLett.113.040503, pmid=25105604 , arxiv=1401.7526 , bibcode=2014PhRvL.113d0503S , s2cid=26493608


Experiments

Permutationally invariant tomography has been tested experimentally for a four-qubit symmetric Dicke state, and also for a six-qubit symmetric Dicke in photons, and has been compared to full state tomography and compressed sensing. A simulation of permutationally invariant tomography shows that reconstruction of a positive semidefinite density matrix of 20 qubits from measured data is possible in a few minutes on a standard computer. The hybrid method combining permutationally invariant tomography and compressed sensing has also been tested.


References

Quantum mechanics Tomography