38 research outputs found
Reliable channel-adapted error correction: Bacon-Shor code recovery from amplitude damping
We construct two simple error correction schemes adapted to amplitude damping
noise for Bacon-Shor codes and investigate their prospects for fault-tolerant
implementation. Both consist solely of Clifford gates and require far fewer
qubits, relative to the standard method, to achieve correction to a desired
order in the damping rate. The first, employing one-bit teleportation and
single-qubit measurements, needs only one fourth as many physical qubits, while
the second, using just stabilizer measurements and Pauli corrections, needs
only half. We show that existing fault-tolerance methods can be employed for
the latter, while the former can be made to avoid potential catastrophic errors
and can easily cope with damping faults in ancilla qubits.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur
Is error detection helpful on IBM 5Q chips ?
This paper reports on experiments realized on several IBM 5Q chips which show
evidence for the advantage of using error detection and fault-tolerant design
of quantum circuits. We show an average improvement of the task of sampling
from states that can be fault-tolerantly prepared in the code, when
using a fault-tolerant technique well suited to the layout of the chip. By
showing that fault-tolerant quantum computation is already within our reach,
the author hopes to encourage this approach.Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures, 6 table
The Small Stellated Dodecahedron Code and Friends
We explore a distance-3 homological CSS quantum code, namely the small
stellated dodecahedron code, for dense storage of quantum information and we
compare its performance with the distance-3 surface code. The data and ancilla
qubits of the small stellated dodecahedron code can be located on the edges
resp. vertices of a small stellated dodecahedron, making this code suitable for
3D connectivity. This code encodes 8 logical qubits into 30 physical qubits
(plus 22 ancilla qubits for parity check measurements) as compared to 1 logical
qubit into 9 physical qubits (plus 8 ancilla qubits) for the surface code. We
develop fault-tolerant parity check circuits and a decoder for this code,
allowing us to numerically assess the circuit-based pseudo-threshold.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, comments welcome! v2 includes updates which
conforms with the journal versio