Error mitigation and quantum-assisted simulation in the error corrected regime

2021 
A standard approach to quantum computing is based on the idea of promoting a classically simulable and fault-tolerant set of operations to a universal set by the addition of magic quantum states. In this context, we develop a general framework to discuss the value of the available, non-ideal magic resources, relative to those ideally required. We single out a quantity, the Quantum-assisted Robustness of Magic (QRoM), which measures the overhead of simulating the ideal resource with the non-ideal ones through quasiprobability-based methods. This extends error mitigation techniques, originally developed for Noisy Intermediate Scale Quantum (NISQ) devices, to the case where qubits are logically encoded. The QRoM shows how the addition of noisy magic resources allows to boost classical quasiprobability simulations of a quantum circuit and allows the construction of explicit protocols, interpolating between classical simulation and an ideal quantum computer.
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