Open Access
Nature Communications, volume 12, issue 1, publication number 6961
Noise-induced barren plateaus in variational quantum algorithms
Samson Wang
1, 2
,
Enrico Fontana
1, 3, 4
,
M. Cerezo
1, 5
,
Kunal Sharma
1, 6, 7
,
Akira Sone
1, 5, 8
,
Lukasz Cincio
1
,
Patrick Coles
1
7
8
Aliro Technologies, Inc, Boston, USA
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-11-29
Journal:
Nature Communications
scimago Q1
SJR: 4.887
CiteScore: 24.9
Impact factor: 14.7
ISSN: 20411723
General Chemistry
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
General Physics and Astronomy
Abstract
Variational Quantum Algorithms (VQAs) may be a path to quantum advantage on Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum (NISQ) computers. A natural question is whether noise on NISQ devices places fundamental limitations on VQA performance. We rigorously prove a serious limitation for noisy VQAs, in that the noise causes the training landscape to have a barren plateau (i.e., vanishing gradient). Specifically, for the local Pauli noise considered, we prove that the gradient vanishes exponentially in the number of qubits n if the depth of the ansatz grows linearly with n. These noise-induced barren plateaus (NIBPs) are conceptually different from noise-free barren plateaus, which are linked to random parameter initialization. Our result is formulated for a generic ansatz that includes as special cases the Quantum Alternating Operator Ansatz and the Unitary Coupled Cluster Ansatz, among others. For the former, our numerical heuristics demonstrate the NIBP phenomenon for a realistic hardware noise model. Variational quantum algorithms (VQAs) are a leading candidate for useful applications of near-term quantum computing, but limitations due to unavoidable noise have not been clearly characterized. Here, the authors prove that local Pauli noise can cause vanishing gradients rendering VQAs untrainable.
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