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Alicja Dutkiewicz, Thomas E. O'Brien, Stefano Polla (Mar 24 2026).
Abstract: We introduce a classical estimator for the post-processing of quantum phase estimation data generated either by quantum-Fourier-transform-based or quantum-signal-processing-based methods. We focus on the estimation of a single target phase promised to be within an interval where no other phases are present, which is typical of e.g. ground state energy estimation of gapped quantum systems. This allows us to perform phase estimation by filtering the signal within the promise region and recovering the phase through a moment-projection estimator. We show that our methods are robust in the presence of both additional phases outside the promise region and global depolarizing noise. In the noiseless case our estimator can achieve an exponential suppression of bias with respect to a naive mean estimator. In the presence of global depolarizing noise our estimator achieves a bias exponentially small in the circuit depth tt at fixed circuit fidelity FF, and a variance proportional to t2t^{-2}, improving by a factor of t2t^2 over the naive shifted-and-rescaled-mean approach. To mitigate realistic circuit-level noise, we combine our method with the explicit unbiasing scheme described in [Dutkiewicz et al., 2025]. As an illustrative example, we implement these estimators on a small-scale simulation of the Ising model, validating our theoretical results and finding better-than-expected performance for a global depolarizing noise approximation. The robustness of the moment-projection estimator in the presence of both multiple eigenvalues and realistic noise makes phase estimation with limited depth practical for early fault tolerant quantum experiments.

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