Abstract
As shown in previous work, in some cases closed quantum systems exhibit a non-conventional
absence of trade-off between performance and robustness in the sense that controllers with the
highest fidelity can also provide the best robustness to parameter uncertainty. As the dephasing
induced by the interaction of the system with the environment guides the evolution to a more
classically mixed state, it is worth investigating what effect the introduction of dephasing has on
the relationship between performance and robustness. In this paper we analyze the robustness
of the fidelity error, as measured by the logarithmic sensitivity function, to dephasing processes.
We show that introduction of dephasing as a perturbation to the nominal unitary dynamics
requires a modification of the log-sensitivity formulation used to measure robustness about
an uncertain parameter with non-zero nominal value used in previous work. We consider
controllers optimized for a number of target objectives ranging from fidelity under coherent
evolution to fidelity under dephasing dynamics to determine the extent to which optimizing
for a specific regime has desirable effects in terms of robustness. Our analysis is based on two
independent computations of the log-sensitivity: a statistical Monte Carlo approach and an
analytic calculation. We show that despite the different log-sensitivity calculations employed
in this study, both demonstrate that the log-sensitivity of the fidelity error to dephasing results
in a conventional trade-off between performance and robustness.
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