Nonclassicality and Coherent Error Detection via Pseudo-Entropy

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Abstract

Pseudo-entropy is a complex-valued generalization of entanglement entropy defined on non-Hermitian transition operators and induced by post-selection. We present a simulation-based protocol for detecting nonclassicality and coherent errors in quantum circuits using this pseudo-entropy measure (Formula presented.), focusing on its imaginary part (Formula presented.) as a diagnostic tool. Our method enables resource-efficient classification of phase-coherent errors, such as those from miscalibrated CNOT gates, even under realistic noise conditions. By quantifying the transition between classical-like and quantum-like behavior through threshold analysis, we provide theoretical benchmarks for error classification that can inform hardware calibration strategies. Numerical simulations demonstrate that 55% of the parameter space remains classified as classical-like (below classification thresholds) at hardware-calibrated sensitivity levels, with statistical significance confirmed through rigorous sensitivity analysis. Robustness to noise and comparison with standard entropy-based methods are demonstrated in a simulation. While hardware validation remains necessary, this work bridges theoretical concepts of nonclassicality with practical quantum error classification frameworks, providing a foundation for experimental quantum computing applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1165
JournalEntropy
Volume27
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 17 Nov 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.

Keywords

  • coherent errors
  • pseudo-entropy
  • quantum computing
  • quantum error detection
  • quantum information

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