Quantum Hamiltonian Identifiability via a Similarity Transformation Approach and beyond
Date
Authors
Wang, Yuanlong
Dong, Daoyi
Sone, Akira
Petersen, Ian
Yonezawa, Hidehiro
Cappellaro, Paola
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE Inc)
Abstract
The identifiability of a system is concerned
with whether the unknown parameters in the system can
be uniquely determined with all the possible data generated by a certain experimental setting. A test of quantum
Hamiltonian identifiability is an important tool to save time
and cost when exploring the identification capability of
quantum probes and experimentally implementing quantum identification schemes. In this article, we generalize
the identifiability test based on the similarity transformation approach (STA) in classical control theory and extend
it to the domain of quantum Hamiltonian identification.
We employ the STA to prove the identifiability of spin-1/2
chain systems with arbitrary dimension assisted by singlequbit probes. We further extend the traditional STA method
by proposing a structure preserving transformation (SPT method for nonminimal systems. We use the SPT method to
introduce an indicator for the existence of economic quantum Hamiltonian identification algorithms, whose computational complexity directly depends on the number of unknown parameters (which could be much smaller than the
system dimension). Finally, we give an example of such an
economic Hamiltonian identification algorithm and perform
simulations to demonstrate its effectiveness.
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Source
IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control
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Access Statement
Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0