Quantum T-designs
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A quantum t-design is a probability distribution over either pure
quantum states In quantum physics, a quantum state is a mathematical entity that provides a probability distribution for the outcomes of each possible measurement in quantum mechanics, measurement on a system. Knowledge of the quantum state together with the rul ...
or unitary operators which can duplicate properties of the probability distribution over the
Haar measure In mathematical analysis, the Haar measure assigns an "invariant volume" to subsets of locally compact topological groups, consequently defining an integral for functions on those groups. This measure was introduced by Alfréd Haar in 1933, though ...
for polynomials of degree t or less. Specifically, the average of any polynomial function of degree t over the design is exactly the same as the average over Haar measure. Here the Haar measure is a uniform probability distribution over all quantum states or over all unitary operators. Quantum t-designs are so called because they are analogous to t-designs in classical statistics, which arose historically in connection with the problem of
design of experiments The design of experiments (DOE, DOX, or experimental design) is the design of any task that aims to describe and explain the variation of information under conditions that are hypothesized to reflect the variation. The term is generally associ ...
. Two particularly important types of t-designs in quantum mechanics are projective and unitary t-designs. A
spherical design A spherical design, part of combinatorial design theory in mathematics, is a finite set of ''N'' points on the ''d''-dimensional unit n-sphere, ''d''-sphere ''Sd'' such that the average value of any polynomial ''f'' of degree ''t'' or less on the se ...
is a collection of points on the unit sphere for which polynomials of bounded degree can be averaged over to obtain the same value that integrating over surface measure on the sphere gives. Spherical and projective t-designs derive their names from the works of Delsarte, Goethals, and Seidel in the late 1970s, but these objects played earlier roles in several branches of mathematics, including numerical integration and number theory. Particular examples of these objects have found uses in
quantum information theory Quantum information is the information of the quantum state, state of a quantum system. It is the basic entity of study in quantum information theory, and can be manipulated using quantum information processing techniques. Quantum information re ...
,
quantum cryptography Quantum cryptography is the science of exploiting quantum mechanical properties to perform cryptographic tasks. The best known example of quantum cryptography is quantum key distribution which offers an information-theoretically secure solution ...
, and other related fields. Unitary t-designs are analogous to spherical designs in that they reproduce the entire
unitary group In mathematics, the unitary group of degree ''n'', denoted U(''n''), is the group of unitary matrices, with the group operation of matrix multiplication. The unitary group is a subgroup of the general linear group . Hyperorthogonal group is an ...
via a finite collection of
unitary matrices In linear algebra, a complex square matrix is unitary if its conjugate transpose is also its inverse, that is, if U^* U = UU^* = UU^ = I, where is the identity matrix. In physics, especially in quantum mechanics, the conjugate transpose ...
. The theory of unitary 2-designs was developed in 2006 specifically to achieve a practical means of efficient and scalable randomized benchmarking to assess the errors in quantum computing operations, called gates. Since then unitary t-designs have been found useful in other areas of
quantum computing Quantum computing is a type of computation whose operations can harness the phenomena of quantum mechanics, such as superposition, interference, and entanglement. Devices that perform quantum computations are known as quantum computers. Though ...
and more broadly in
quantum information theory Quantum information is the information of the quantum state, state of a quantum system. It is the basic entity of study in quantum information theory, and can be manipulated using quantum information processing techniques. Quantum information re ...
and applied to problems as far reaching as the black hole information paradox. Unitary t-designs are especially relevant to randomization tasks in quantum computing since ideal operations are usually represented by unitary operators.


Motivation

In a d-dimensional Hilbert space when averaging over all quantum pure states the natural
group A group is a number of persons or things that are located, gathered, or classed together. Groups of people * Cultural group, a group whose members share the same cultural identity * Ethnic group, a group whose members share the same ethnic iden ...
is SU(d), the
special unitary group In mathematics, the special unitary group of degree , denoted , is the Lie group of unitary matrices with determinant 1. The more general unitary matrices may have complex determinants with absolute value 1, rather than real 1 in the special ...
of dimension d. The Haar measure is, by definition, the unique group-invariant measure, so it is used to average properties that are not unitarily invariant over all states, or over all unitaries. A particularly widely used example of this is the spin \tfrac system. For this system the relevant group is SU(2) which is the group of all 2x2 unitary operators. Since every 2x2 unitary operator is a rotation of the
Bloch sphere In quantum quantum mechanics, mechanics and Quantum computing, computing, the Bloch sphere is a geometrical representation of the pure state space of a two-level system, two-level quantum mechanical system (qubit), named after the physicist Felix ...
, the Haar measure for spin-1/2 particles is invariant under all rotations of the Bloch sphere. This implies that the Haar measure is ''the'' rotationally invariant measure on the Bloch sphere, which can be thought of as a constant density distribution over the surface of the sphere. An important class of complex projective t-designs, are symmetric informationally complete positive operator-valued measures
POVM In functional analysis and quantum measurement theory, a positive operator-valued measure (POVM) is a measure whose values are positive semi-definite operators on a Hilbert space. POVMs are a generalisation of projection-valued measures (PVM) and ...
's, which are complex projective 2-design. Since such 2-designs must have at least d^2 elements, a
SIC-POVM A symmetric, informationally complete, positive operator-valued measure (SIC-POVM) is a special case of a generalized measurement on a Hilbert space, used in the field of quantum mechanics. A measurement of the prescribed form satisfies certain def ...
is a minimal sized complex projective 2-designs.


Spherical t-Designs

Complex projective t-designs have been studied in
quantum information theory Quantum information is the information of the quantum state, state of a quantum system. It is the basic entity of study in quantum information theory, and can be manipulated using quantum information processing techniques. Quantum information re ...
as quantum t-designs. These are closely related to spherical 2t-designs of vectors in the unit sphere in \mathbb^d which when naturally embedded in \mathbb^ give rise to complex projective t-designs. Formally, we define a probability distribution over quantum states (p_i,, \phi_i\rangle) to be a complex projective t-design if \sum_i p_i (, \phi_i\rangle \langle \phi_i, )^ = \int_(, \psi\rangle \langle \psi, )^d\psi Here, the integral over states is taken over the Haar measure on the unit sphere in \mathbb^d Exact t-designs over quantum states cannot be distinguished from the uniform probability distribution over all states when using t copies of a state from the probability distribution. However in practice even t-designs may be difficult to compute. For this reason approximate t-designs are useful. Approximate t-designs are most useful due to their ability to be efficiently implemented. i.e. it is possible to generate a quantum state , \phi\rangle distributed according to the probability distribution p_i , \phi_i\rangle in O(\log^c d) time. This efficient construction also implies that the
POVM In functional analysis and quantum measurement theory, a positive operator-valued measure (POVM) is a measure whose values are positive semi-definite operators on a Hilbert space. POVMs are a generalisation of projection-valued measures (PVM) and ...
of the operators Np_i , \phi_i\rangle\langle\phi_i, can be implemented in O(\log^c d) time. The technical definition of an approximate t-design is: If \sum_i p_i , \phi_i\rangle \langle \phi_i, = \int_, \psi\rangle \langle \psi, d\psi and (1-\epsilon)\int_(, \psi\rangle \langle \psi, )^d\psi \leq \sum_i p_i (, \phi_i\rangle \langle \phi_i, )^ \leq (1+\epsilon)\int_(, \psi\rangle \langle \psi, )^d\psi then (p_i,, \phi_i\rangle) is an \epsilon-approximate t-design. It is possible, though perhaps inefficient, to find an \epsilon-approximate t-design consisting of quantum pure states for a fixed t.


Construction

For convenience d is assumed to be a power of 2. Using the fact that for any d there exists a set of N^d functions \rightarrow such that for any distinct k_1, ..., k_N \in the image under f, where f is chosen at random from S, is exactly the uniform distribution over tuples of N elements of . Let , \psi\rangle = \sum_^d \alpha_i , i\rangle be drawn from the Haar measure. Let P_d be the probability distribution of \alpha_1 and let P= \lim_ \sqrt P_d. Finally let \alpha be drawn from P. If we define X = , \alpha, with probability \tfrac12 and X = -, \alpha, with probability \tfrac then: E ^j= 0 for odd j and E ^j= (\tfrac)! for even j. Using this and
Gaussian quadrature In numerical analysis, a quadrature rule is an approximation of the definite integral of a function, usually stated as a weighted sum of function values at specified points within the domain of integration. (See numerical integration for more ...
we can construct p_ = \frac so that p_, \psi_\rangle is an approximate t-design.


Unitary t-Designs

Unitary t-designs are analogous to spherical designs in that they reproduce the entire
unitary group In mathematics, the unitary group of degree ''n'', denoted U(''n''), is the group of unitary matrices, with the group operation of matrix multiplication. The unitary group is a subgroup of the general linear group . Hyperorthogonal group is an ...
via a finite collection of
unitary matrices In linear algebra, a complex square matrix is unitary if its conjugate transpose is also its inverse, that is, if U^* U = UU^* = UU^ = I, where is the identity matrix. In physics, especially in quantum mechanics, the conjugate transpose ...
. The theory of unitary 2-designs was developed in 2006 specifically to achieve a practical means of efficient and scalable randomized benchmarking to assess the errors in quantum computing operations, called gates. Since then unitary t-designs have been found useful in other areas of
quantum computing Quantum computing is a type of computation whose operations can harness the phenomena of quantum mechanics, such as superposition, interference, and entanglement. Devices that perform quantum computations are known as quantum computers. Though ...
and more broadly in
quantum information theory Quantum information is the information of the quantum state, state of a quantum system. It is the basic entity of study in quantum information theory, and can be manipulated using quantum information processing techniques. Quantum information re ...
and in fields as far reaching as black hole physics. Unitary t-designs are especially relevant to randomization tasks in quantum computing since ideal operations are usually represented by unitary operators. Elements of a unitary t-design are elements of the unitary group, U(d), the group of d \times d unitary matrices. A t-design of unitary operators will generate a t-design of states. Suppose is a unitary t-design (i.e. a set of unitary operators). Then for ''any'' pure state , \psi\rangle let , \psi_k\rangle = U_k, \psi\rangle. Then will always be a t-design for states. Formally define a ''unitary t-design'', X, if \frac\sum_ U^\otimes (U^)^ = \int_ U^\otimes (U^)^dU Observe that the space linearly spanned by the matrices U^\otimes (U^)^dU over all choices of U is identical to the restriction U \in X and r + s = t This observation leads to a conclusion about the duality between unitary designs and unitary codes. Using the permutation maps it is possible to verify directly that a set of unitary matrices forms a t-design. One direct result of this is that for any finite X \subseteq U(d) \frac \sum_, tr(U*V), ^ \geq \int_, tr(U*V), ^dU With equality if and only if X is a t-design. 1 and 2-designs have been examined in some detail and absolute bounds for the dimension of X, , X, , have been derived.


Bounds for unitary designs

Define Hom(U(d),t,t) as the set of functions homogeneous of degree t in U and homogeneous of degree t in U^, then if for every f \in Hom(U(d),t,t): \frac \sum_ f(U) = \int_f(U) dU then X is a unitary t-design. We further define the inner product for functions f and g on U(d) as the average value of \barg as: \langle f,g\rangle := \int_\barg(U) dX and \langle f,g\rangle_X as the average value of \barg over any finite subset X \subset U(d). It follows that X is a unitary t-design if and only if \langle 1,f\rangle_X = \langle 1,f\rangle \quad\forall f. From the above it is demonstrable that if X is a t-design then , X, \geq \dim(\operatorname(U(d),\left\lceil\tfrac2\right\rceil,\left\lfloor\tfrac2\right\rfloor)) is an absolute bound for the design. This imposes an upper bound on the size of a unitary design. This bound is absolute meaning it depends only on the strength of the design or the degree of the code, and not the distances in the subset, X. A unitary code is a finite subset of the unitary group in which a few inner product values occur between elements. Specifically, a unitary code is defined as a finite subset X \subset U(d) if for all U \neq M in X , \operatorname(U^*M), ^2 takes only distinct values. It follows that , X, \leq \dim(\operatorname(U(d),s,s)) and if U and M are orthogonal: , X, \leq \dim(\operatorname(U(d),s,s-1))


See also

*
Spherical design A spherical design, part of combinatorial design theory in mathematics, is a finite set of ''N'' points on the ''d''-dimensional unit n-sphere, ''d''-sphere ''Sd'' such that the average value of any polynomial ''f'' of degree ''t'' or less on the se ...
*
Equiangular lines In geometry, a set of lines is called equiangular if all the lines intersect at a single point, and every pair of lines makes the same angle. Equiangular lines in Euclidean space Computing the maximum number of equiangular lines in ''n''-dimensi ...
*
Welch bounds In mathematics, Welch bounds are a family of inequalities pertinent to the problem of evenly spreading a set of unit vectors in a vector space. The bounds are important tools in the design and analysis of certain methods in telecommunication engin ...


References

{{reflist, 2 Quantum information science Information theory Quantum information theory