npj Quantum Information (Dec 2020)

Classical communication enhanced quantum state verification

  • Wen-Hao Zhang,
  • Xiao Liu,
  • Peng Yin,
  • Xing-Xiang Peng,
  • Gong-Chu Li,
  • Xiao-Ye Xu,
  • Shang Yu,
  • Zhi-Bo Hou,
  • Yong-Jian Han,
  • Jin-Shi Xu,
  • Zong-Quan Zhou,
  • Geng Chen,
  • Chuan-Feng Li,
  • Guang-Can Guo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41534-020-00328-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Quantum state verification provides an efficient approach to characterize the reliability of quantum devices for generating certain target states. The figure of merit of a specific strategy is the estimated infidelity ϵ of the tested state to the target state, given a certain number of performed measurements n. Entangled measurements constitute the globally optimal strategy and achieve the scaling that ϵ is inversely proportional to n. Recent advances show that it is possible to achieve the same scaling simply with non-adaptive local measurements; however, the performance is still worse than the globally optimal bound up to a constant factor. In this work, by introducing classical communication, we experimentally implement an adaptive quantum state verification. The constant factor is minimized from ~2.5 to 1.5 in this experiment, which means that only 60% measurements are required to achieve a certain value of ϵ compared to optimal non-adaptive local strategy. Our results indicate that classical communication significantly enhances the performance of quantum state verification, and leads to an efficiency that further approaches the globally optimal bound.