The generation of a large amount of entanglement is a necessary condition for a quantum computer to achieve quantum advantage. In this paper, we propose a method to efficiently generate pseudo-random quantum states, for which the degree of multipartite entanglement is nearly maximal. We argue that the method is optimal, and use it to benchmark actual superconducting (IBM’s ibm_lagos) and ion trap (IonQ’s Harmony) quantum processors. Despite the fact that ibm_lagos has lower single-qubit and two-qubit error rates, the overall performance of Harmony is better thanks to its low error rate in state preparation and measurement and to the all-to-all connectivity of qubits. Our result highlights the relevance of the qubits network architecture to generate highly entangled states.
Characterizing and mitigating errors in current noisy intermediate-scale devices is important to improve the performance of the next generation of quantum hardware. To investigate the importance of the different noise mechanisms affecting quantum computation, we performed a full quantum process tomography of single qubits in a real quantum processor in which echo experiments are implemented. In addition to the sources of error already included in the standard models, the obtained results show the dominant role of coherent errors, which we practically corrected by inserting random single-qubit unitaries in the quantum circuit, significantly increasing the circuit length over which quantum computations on actual quantum hardware produce reliable results.
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