On the Sample Complexity of PAC Learning Quantum Process

10/25/2018
by   Kai-Min Chung, et al.
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We generalize the PAC (probably approximately correct) learning model to the quantum world by generalizing the concepts from classical functions to quantum processes, defining the problem of PAC learning quantum process, and study its sample complexity. In the problem of PAC learning quantum process, we want to learn an ϵ-approximate of an unknown quantum process c^* from a known finite concept class C with probability 1-δ using samples {(x_1,c^*(x_1)),(x_2,c^*(x_2)),...}, where {x_1,x_2, ...} are computational basis states sampled from an unknown distribution D and {c^*(x_1),c^*(x_2),...} are the (possibly mixed) quantum states outputted by c^*. The special case of PAC-learning quantum process under constant input reduces to a natural problem which we named as approximate state discrimination, where we are given copies of an unknown quantum state c^* from an known finite set C, and we want to learn with probability 1-δ an ϵ-approximate of c^* with as few copies of c^* as possible. We show that the problem of PAC learning quantum process can be solved with O(|C| + (1/ δ)/ϵ^2) samples when the outputs are pure states and O(^3 |C|( |C|+(1/ δ))/ϵ^2) samples if the outputs can be mixed. Some implications of our results are that we can PAC-learn a polynomial sized quantum circuit in polynomial samples and approximate state discrimination can be solved in polynomial samples even when concept class size |C| is exponential in the number of qubits, an exponentially improvement over a full state tomography.

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