Stable Phase Retrieval: Optimal Rates in Poisson and Heavy-tailed Models
Abstract
We investigate stable recovery guarantees for phase retrieval under two realistic and challenging noise models: the Poisson model and the heavy-tailed model. Our analysis covers both nonconvex least squares (NCVX-LS) and convex least squares (CVX-LS) estimators. For the Poisson model, we demonstrate that in the high-energy regime where the true signal pmbx exceeds a certain energy threshold, both estimators achieve a signal-independent, minimax optimal error rate O(nm), with n denoting the signal dimension and m the number of sampling vectors. In contrast, in the low-energy regime, the NCVX-LS estimator attains an error rate of O(\|x\|1/42·(nm)1/4), which decreases as the energy of signal x diminishes and remains nearly optimal with respect to the oversampling ratio. This demonstrates a signal-energy-adaptive behavior in the Poisson setting. For the heavy-tailed model with noise having a finite q-th moment (q>2), both estimators attain the minimax optimal error rate O( \| \|Lq\| x \|2 · nm ) in the high-energy regime, while the NCVX-LS estimator further achieves the minimax optimal rate O( \| \|Lq· (nm)1/4 ) in the low-energy regime. Our analysis builds on two key ideas: the use of multiplier inequalities to handle noise that may exhibit dependence on the sampling vectors, and a novel interpretation of Poisson noise as sub-exponential in the high-energy regime yet heavy-tailed in the low-energy regime. These insights form the foundation of a unified analytical framework, which we further apply to a range of related problems, including sparse phase retrieval, low-rank PSD matrix recovery, and random blind deconvolution.
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