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Quantum Machine Learning
Learning partial transpose signatures in qubit ququart states from a few measurements
arXiv
Authors: Christian Candeago, Paolo Da Rold, Michele Grossi, Pawel Horodecki, Antonio Mandarino
Year
2026
Paper ID
12100
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
168
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Higher-dimensional quantum systems are attracting interest for improving quantum protocol performance by increasing memory space. Characterizing quantum resources of such systems is fundamental but experimentally costly. We tackle the first non-trivial example: a qubit-ququart system, focusing on partial-transpose spectral classification. Entanglement distillation extracts maximally entangled states from noisy resources, but determining distillability typically requires full state tomography, experimentally prohibitive for high-dimensional systems. We explore a machine learning framework to classify distillable bipartite quantum states using fewer measurements than complete tomography. Our approach employs the PPT criterion, categorizing states by negative eigenvalues in the partial transpose. We use various ML algorithms, including Support Vector Machines, Random Forest, and Artificial Neural Networks, with features from fixed measurements and learnable observables. Results show learnable observables consistently outperform Collective Measurement Witnesses methods. While all models distinguish between non-distillable (PPT) and distillable (NPT) states, differentiating NPT subclasses remains challenging, underscoring the intricate Hilbert space geometry. This work provides an experimentally friendly tool for distillability verification in high-dimensional quantum systems without full state reconstruction
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Machine Learning research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Higher-dimensional quantum systems are attracting interest for improving quantum protocol performance by increasing memory space.
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