Posted

Josep Lumbreras, Marco Tomamichel (May 12 2026).
Abstract: We extend quantum state tomography with minimal cumulative disturbance, first investigated in [arXiv:2406.18370], to arbitrary finite-dimensional pure states. A learner sequentially receives fresh copies of an unknown pure state, chooses a rank-one projector for each copy using the previous outcomes, and performs the corresponding two-outcome projective measurement. The goal is to learn the state while keeping the chosen projectors close to the unknown state in order to minimize disturbance. The qubit solution relies on the special geometry of the Bloch sphere and does not extend directly to qudits, where pure states form a curved manifold. We show that this obstruction can be overcome by working locally on the pure-state manifold. The algorithm proceeds in epochs. In each epoch, it fixes a current estimate, measures pairs of nearby rank-one projectors obtained by moving in opposite tangent directions, and takes differences of the corresponding outcomes. This gives an exact linear observation of the tangent component of the error. The resulting local linear models are combined with a robust variance-adaptive estimator and a hot-start regularization that transfers precision across epochs. For every unknown pure state in dimension (d), after (T)measured copies, our protocol achieves cumulative regret (\mathcalO(d^3\log^2 T)), and at each intermediate time (t≤T)its current estimate has online infidelity (\mathcalO(d^3\log(T)/t)). Hence, pure-state tomography with essentially no cumulative disturbance is not a peculiarity of qubits but a geometric phenomenon that persists for qudits.

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!