Posted

Steven T. Flammia, Dmitrii Khitrin, Muzhou Ma, Jamie Sikora, Yu Tong, Alice Zheng (Mar 30 2026).
Abstract: Modern quantum devices require high-precision Hamiltonian dynamics, but environmental noise can cause calibrated Hamiltonian parameters to drift over time, necessitating expensive recalibration. Detecting when recalibration is needed is challenging, especially since the very gates required for sophisticated verification protocols may themselves be miscalibrated. While cloud quantum computing services implement heuristic routines for triggering recalibration, the fundamental limits of optimal recalibration are not yet known. We develop efficient Hamiltonian certification and changepoint detection protocols in the autonomous setting, where we cannot rely on an external noiseless device and use only single-qubit gates and measurements, making the protocols robust to the calibration issues for multi-qubit operations they aim to detect. For unknown nn-qubit Hamiltonians HH and H0H_0 with operator norm bounded by MM, our certification protocol distinguishes whether HH0Fϵ\|H-H_0\|_F\geq\epsilon or HH0FO(ϵ/n)\|H-H_0\|_F\leq O(\epsilon/\sqrt{n}) with sample complexity O(nM2ln(1/δ)/ϵ2)O(nM^2\ln(1/\delta)/\epsilon^2) and total evolution time O(nMln(1/δ)/ϵ2)O(nM\ln(1/\delta)/\epsilon^2). We achieve this by evolving random stabilizer product states and performing adaptive single-qubit measurements based on a classically simulable hypothesis state. Extending this to continuous monitoring, we develop an online changepoint detection algorithm using the CUSUM procedure that achieves a detection delay time bound of O(nMln(ME[T])/ϵ2)O(nM\ln(M\mathbb{E}_\infty[T])/\epsilon^2), matching the known asymptotically optimal scaling with respect to false alarm run time E[T]\mathbb{E}_\infty[T]. Our approach enables quantum devices to autonomously monitor their own calibration status without requiring ancillary systems, entangling operations, or a trusted reference device, offering a practical solution for robust quantum computing with contemporary noisy devices.

Order by:

Want to join this discussion?

Join our community today and start discussing with our members by participating in exciting events, competitions, and challenges. Sign up now to engage with quantum experts!