QUANT-PHLGSYJan 4, 2021

Control of Stochastic Quantum Dynamics by Differentiable Programming

arXiv:2101.01190v220 citations
Originality Incremental advance
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This work provides a general, automated approach for designing control strategies for stochastic quantum systems, which is crucial for quantum information processing and metrology, where efficient control is currently lacking.

This paper proposes a differentiable programming framework for automated control of stochastic quantum dynamics, applying it to qubit state preparation and stabilization under homodyne detection. Using neural network controllers, they achieved a mean fidelity of around 85% for preparing and stabilizing a qubit to a target state, even with noisy homodyne signals.

Control of the stochastic dynamics of a quantum system is indispensable in fields such as quantum information processing and metrology. However, there is no general ready-made approach to the design of efficient control strategies. Here, we propose a framework for the automated design of control schemes based on differentiable programming ($\partial \mathrm{P}$). We apply this approach to the state preparation and stabilization of a qubit subjected to homodyne detection. To this end, we formulate the control task as an optimization problem where the loss function quantifies the distance from the target state, and we employ neural networks (NNs) as controllers. The system's time evolution is governed by a stochastic differential equation (SDE). To implement efficient training, we backpropagate the gradient information from the loss function through the SDE solver using adjoint sensitivity methods. As a first example, we feed the quantum state to the controller and focus on different methods of obtaining gradients. As a second example, we directly feed the homodyne detection signal to the controller. The instantaneous value of the homodyne current contains only very limited information on the actual state of the system, masked by unavoidable photon-number fluctuations. Despite the resulting poor signal-to-noise ratio, we can train our controller to prepare and stabilize the qubit to a target state with a mean fidelity of around 85%. We also compare the solutions found by the NN to a hand-crafted control strategy.

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