Explainable Representation Learning of Small Quantum States
This work addresses the challenge of interpretable machine learning for quantum physicists, offering a proof of concept for autonomously gaining insights into quantum state representations, though it is incremental as it focuses on small-scale systems.
The researchers tackled the problem of interpreting how unsupervised machine learning models represent quantum states by training a generative model on two-qubit density matrices, and found that the model's latent representation directly correlated with the entanglement measure concurrence, demonstrating interpretability in learning small-scale quantum systems.
Unsupervised machine learning models build an internal representation of their training data without the need for explicit human guidance or feature engineering. This learned representation provides insights into which features of the data are relevant for the task at hand. In the context of quantum physics, training models to describe quantum states without human intervention offers a promising approach to gaining insight into how machines represent complex quantum states. The ability to interpret the learned representation may offer a new perspective on non-trivial features of quantum systems and their efficient representation. We train a generative model on two-qubit density matrices generated by a parameterized quantum circuit. In a series of computational experiments, we investigate the learned representation of the model and its internal understanding of the data. We observe that the model learns an interpretable representation which relates the quantum states to their underlying entanglement characteristics. In particular, our results demonstrate that the latent representation of the model is directly correlated with the entanglement measure concurrence. The insights from this study represent proof of concept towards interpretable machine learning of quantum states. Our approach offers insight into how machines learn to represent small-scale quantum systems autonomously.