Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pelofske, Elijah, Russo, Vincent
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.06341
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866918519629676544
author Pelofske, Elijah
Russo, Vincent
author_facet Pelofske, Elijah
Russo, Vincent
contents Quantum circuit unoptimization is an algorithm that transforms a quantum circuit into a different circuit that uses more gate operations while maintaining the same unitary transformation. We demonstrate that this method can implement digital zero-noise extrapolation (ZNE), a quantum error mitigation technique. By employing quantum circuit unoptimization as a form of circuit folding, noise can be systematically amplified. The key advantages of this approach are twofold. First, its ability to generate an exponentially increasing number of distinct circuit variants as the noise level is amplified, which allows noise averaging over many circuit variants with slightly different circuit structure. Averaging over these variants can mitigate the effect of biased error propagation due to the significantly altered circuit structure from quantum circuit unoptimization, or biased noise sources on a quantum processor. Second, quantum circuit unoptimization by design resists circuit simplification back to the original unmodified circuit, making it plausible to use ZNE in contexts where circuit compiler optimization is applied server-side. We evaluate the effectiveness of quantum circuit unoptimization as a noise-scaling method for ZNE in two test cases using depolarizing noise numerical simulations: random quantum volume circuits, where the observable is the heavy output probability, and QAOA circuits for the (unweighted) maximum cut problem on random 3-regular graphs, where the observable is the cut value. We show that using quantum circuit unoptimization to perform ZNE can approximately recover signal from noisy quantum simulations.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2503_06341
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Digital Zero-Noise Extrapolation with Quantum Circuit Unoptimization
Pelofske, Elijah
Russo, Vincent
Quantum Physics
Data Structures and Algorithms
Quantum circuit unoptimization is an algorithm that transforms a quantum circuit into a different circuit that uses more gate operations while maintaining the same unitary transformation. We demonstrate that this method can implement digital zero-noise extrapolation (ZNE), a quantum error mitigation technique. By employing quantum circuit unoptimization as a form of circuit folding, noise can be systematically amplified. The key advantages of this approach are twofold. First, its ability to generate an exponentially increasing number of distinct circuit variants as the noise level is amplified, which allows noise averaging over many circuit variants with slightly different circuit structure. Averaging over these variants can mitigate the effect of biased error propagation due to the significantly altered circuit structure from quantum circuit unoptimization, or biased noise sources on a quantum processor. Second, quantum circuit unoptimization by design resists circuit simplification back to the original unmodified circuit, making it plausible to use ZNE in contexts where circuit compiler optimization is applied server-side. We evaluate the effectiveness of quantum circuit unoptimization as a noise-scaling method for ZNE in two test cases using depolarizing noise numerical simulations: random quantum volume circuits, where the observable is the heavy output probability, and QAOA circuits for the (unweighted) maximum cut problem on random 3-regular graphs, where the observable is the cut value. We show that using quantum circuit unoptimization to perform ZNE can approximately recover signal from noisy quantum simulations.
title Digital Zero-Noise Extrapolation with Quantum Circuit Unoptimization
topic Quantum Physics
Data Structures and Algorithms
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.06341