43,849 research outputs found
Topological cluster state quantum computing
The quantum computing scheme described in Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 190504 (2007),
when viewed as a cluster state computation, features a 3-D cluster state, novel
adjustable strength error correction capable of correcting general errors
through the correction of Z errors only, a threshold error rate approaching 1%
and low overhead arbitrarily long-range logical gates. In this work, we review
the scheme in detail framing discussion solely in terms of the required 3-D
cluster state and its stabilizers.Comment: 11 pages, 20 figures, v2 substantially revised and simplified to
remove the need for prior exposure to cluster state quantum computin
Adaptive Measurements in the Optical Quantum Information Laboratory
Adaptive techniques make practical many quantum measurements that would
otherwise be beyond current laboratory capabilities. For example: they allow
discrimination of nonorthogonal states with a probability of error equal to the
Helstrom bound; they allow measurement of the phase of a quantum oscillator
with accuracy approaching (or in some cases attaining) the Heisenberg limit;
and they allow estimation of phase in interferometry with a variance scaling at
the Heisenberg limit, using only single qubit measurement and control. Each of
these examples has close links with quantum information, in particular
experimental optical quantum information: the first is a basic quantum
communication protocol; the second has potential application in linear optical
quantum computing; the third uses an adaptive protocol inspired by the quantum
phase estimation algorithm. We discuss each of these examples, and their
implementation in the laboratory, but concentrate upon the last, which was
published most recently [Higgins {\em et al.}, Nature vol. 450, p. 393, 2007].Comment: 12 pages, invited paper to be published in IEEE Journal of Selected
Topics in Quantum Electronics: Quantum Communications and Information Scienc
Charting the circuit QED design landscape using optimal control theory
With recent improvements in coherence times, superconducting transmon qubits
have become a promising platform for quantum computing. They can be flexibly
engineered over a wide range of parameters, but also require us to identify an
efficient operating regime. Using state-of-the-art quantum optimal control
techniques, we exhaustively explore the landscape for creation and removal of
entanglement over a wide range of design parameters. We identify an optimal
operating region outside of the usually considered strongly dispersive regime,
where multiple sources of entanglement interfere simultaneously, which we name
the quasi-dispersive straddling qutrits (QuaDiSQ) regime. At a chosen point in
this region, a universal gate set is realized by applying microwave fields for
gate durations of 50 ns, with errors approaching the limit of intrinsic
transmon coherence. Our systematic quantum optimal control approach is easily
adapted to explore the parameter landscape of other quantum technology
platforms.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, 2 pages supplementary, 1 supplementary figur
- …