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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing

Active Sampling Sample-based Quantum Diagonalization from Finite-Shot Measurements

arXiv
Authors: Rinka Miura

Year

2026

Paper ID

30860

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

230

Citations

0

Abstract

Near-term quantum devices provide only finite-shot measurements and prepare imperfect, contaminated states. This motivates algorithms that convert samples into reliable low-energy estimates without full tomography or exhaustive measurements. We propose Active Sampling Sample-based Quantum Diagonalization (AS-SQD), framing SQD as an active learning problem: given measured bitstrings, which additional basis states should be included to efficiently recover the ground-state energy? SQD restricts the Hamiltonian to a selected set of basis states and classically diagonalizes the restricted matrix. However, naive SQD using only sampled states suffers from bias under finite-shot sampling and excited-state contamination, while blind random expansion is inefficient as system size grows. We introduce a perturbation-theoretic acquisition function based on Epstein--Nesbet second-order energy corrections to rank candidate basis states connected to the current subspace. At each iteration, AS-SQD diagonalizes the restricted Hamiltonian, generates connected candidates, and adds the most valuable ones according to this score. We evaluate AS-SQD on disordered Heisenberg and Transverse-Field Ising (TFIM) spin chains up to 16 qubits under a preparation model mixing 80% ground state and 20% first excited state. Furthermore, we validate its robustness against real-world state preparation and measurement (SPAM) errors using physical samples from an IBM Quantum processor. Across simulated and hardware evaluations, AS-SQD consistently achieves substantially lower absolute energy errors than standard SQD and random expansion. Detailed ablation studies demonstrate that physics-guided basis acquisition effectively concentrates computation on energetically relevant directions, bypassing exponential combinatorial bottlenecks.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • Near-term quantum devices provide only finite-shot measurements and prepare imperfect, contaminated states.

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