This tutorial discusses the creation of Circuit
objects for use with Gate Set Tomography (GST). If you're not sure what a Circuit
is, you might want to read through the tutorial on circuits first.
While pyGSTi allows one to create arbitrary lists of circuits, the GST algorithms have been designed to work well with circuits that have a particular structure. At the beginning and the end of each string are "preparation fiducial" and "measurement fiducial" circuits (or "sequences"), respectively, whose purpose is to extend the native preparation and measurment operations to informationally complete sets. In between the fiducial sequences is a "germ" sequence, or just "germ", that is repeated some number of times. The purpose of the repeated-germ sequence is to amplify one or more particular types of errors. By considering an entire set of germs (called an "amplificationally complete" set), all possible types of errors are amplified, giving the GST algorithms high sensitivity to all errors. The longer the sequences, that is, the more repetitions of the germs, the higher the sensitivity.
While this may seem to imply that one should just to incredibly long sequences, there are several caveats.
In practice, well-chosen lists of operation sequences can be formed as follows. First, we defne an increasing sequence of maximum-lengths, usually powers of 2, e.g. [1,2,4,8,16,...]
, which terminates with the longest useful sequence length. Secondly, we select preparation- and measurement-fiducial Circuit
lists, and a list of germ circuits. These lists are chosen such that the fiducial sequences result in informationally complete preparations and measurements, and the germs are amplificationally complete. For each maximum-length $L$, the set of all
preparation_fiducial + repeated_germ + measurement_fiducial
circuits, where preparation_fiducial
ranges over all preparation fiducials, measurement_fiducial
ranges over all measurement fiducials, and repeated_germ
ranges over all the germs repeated such that the length of repeated_germ
does not exceed $L$. To further increase the robustness of the numerics, the circuit list corresponding to $L$ will also contain all of the sequences from earlier (lower) values of $L$. This procedure thus creates a list of operation sequences for each $L$ that are designed for use by pyGSTi's "long-sequence" GST algorithms.
The fiducial and germ lists are obtained by pyGSTi's "fiducial selection" and "germ selection" algorithms, which are explained in more detail in the tutorial on fiducial and germ selection. This this tutorial we'll be using one of pyGSTi's built-in "model packs" (see the model pack tutorial), for which fiducial and germ circuits are pre-computed:
import pygsti
from pygsti.modelpacks import smq1Q_XY #import the standard X(pi/2), Y(pi/2) model info
prep_fiducials = smq1Q_XY.prep_fiducials()
meas_fiducials = smq1Q_XY.meas_fiducials()
germs = smq1Q_XY.germs()
print("Prep fiducials:\n", prep_fiducials)
print("Meas fiducials:\n", meas_fiducials)
print("Germs:\n",germs)
We can now construct a the lists of sequences used by a long-sequence GST algorithm by defining a list of maximum lengths and calling create_lsgst_circuit_lists
:
maxLengths = [1,2,4]
lsgst_lists = pygsti.circuits.create_lsgst_circuit_lists(['Gx','Gy'], prep_fiducials, meas_fiducials, germs, maxLengths)
#Print the result. Note that larger L lists also contain all the elements of lower-L lists.
# Note also that germs which are length 4 only show up in the L=4 list, and there are only "repeated" once.
for i,lst in enumerate(lsgst_lists):
print("\nList %d (max-length L=%d): %d Circuits" % (i,maxLengths[i],len(lst)))
print('\n'.join([c.str for c in lst])) # Note: use ".str" to get a *single-line* string representation
While a list-of-lists such as lsgst_lists
is all that is needed by the core long-sequence GST algorithms, one can also construct, in similar fashion, a list of pygsti.objects.CircuitStructure
objects. These objects mimic a list of Circuits
in many ways, but retain the structure of each circuit so that per-circuit quantities may later be plotted according to their decomposition into fiducials, germ, and $L$. The allstrs
member of a CircuitStructure
allows access to the underlying list of Circuit
objects. We'll demonstrate this when we get to plotting. For now, just think of this as a slightly richer way to generate the circuits needed by a GST algorithm that facilitates post-processing and analysis.
#Note: same arguments as make_lsgst_lists
lsgst_structs = pygsti.circuits.create_lsgst_circuit_lists(['Gx','Gy'], prep_fiducials, meas_fiducials, germs, maxLengths)
print(type(lsgst_structs[0]))
for i,struct in enumerate(lsgst_structs):
print("Struct %d (L=%d) has %d strings" % (i,maxLengths[i],len(struct)))
If you're taking data, not running a GST algorithm, then you just want a single list of all the circuits that the GST algorithm will need. Since most of the time the lists are nested, that is, all of the lower-$L$ (shorter) circuits appear in the higher-$L$ (longer) circuits, the final element of lsgst_lists
is often the list of required experiments. However, in advanced usages this is not always the case, and so there is a dedicated function, make_lsgst_experiment_list
which performs this constrution:
#Note: same arguments as make_lsgst_lists
lsgst_experiment_list = pygsti.circuits.create_lsgst_circuits(['Gx','Gy'], prep_fiducials,
meas_fiducials, germs, maxLengths)
print("%d experiments to do..." % len(lsgst_experiment_list))
As a final full-fledged example we demonstrate the use of pyGSTi's more general Circuit
creation and processing functions to create the lists of LSGST circuits. The following example functions are very similar to pygsti.construction.create_lsgst_circuit_lists
except we assume that the preparation and measurement fiducial sequences are the same.
import pygsti.circuits as pc
def my_make_lsgst_lists(gateLabels, fiducialList, germList, maxLengthList):
singleOps = pc.to_circuits([(g,) for g in gateLabels])
lgstStrings = pc.create_lgst_circuits(fiducialList, fiducialList, gateLabels)
lsgst_list = pc.to_circuits([ () ]) #running list of all strings so far
if maxLengthList[0] == 0:
lsgst_listOfLists = [ lgstStrings ]
maxLengthList = maxLengthList[1:]
else: lsgst_listOfLists = [ ]
for maxLen in maxLengthList:
lsgst_list += pc.create_circuits("f0+R(germ,N)+f1", f0=fiducialList,
f1=fiducialList, germ=germList, N=maxLen,
R=pc.repeat_with_max_length,
order=('germ','f0','f1'))
lsgst_listOfLists.append( pygsti.remove_duplicates(lgstStrings + lsgst_list) )
print("%d LSGST sets w/lengths" % len(lsgst_listOfLists), list(map(len,lsgst_listOfLists)))
return lsgst_listOfLists
my_lsgst_lists = my_make_lsgst_lists(['Gx','Gy'], prep_fiducials, germs, maxLengths)
print('\n'.join(['%d strings' % len(l) for l in my_lsgst_lists]))