7,000 research outputs found

    Universal fault-tolerant gates on concatenated stabilizer codes

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    It is an oft-cited fact that no quantum code can support a set of fault-tolerant logical gates that is both universal and transversal. This no-go theorem is generally responsible for the interest in alternative universality constructions including magic state distillation. Widely overlooked, however, is the possibility of non-transversal, yet still fault-tolerant, gates that work directly on small quantum codes. Here we demonstrate precisely the existence of such gates. In particular, we show how the limits of non-transversality can be overcome by performing rounds of intermediate error-correction to create logical gates on stabilizer codes that use no ancillas other than those required for syndrome measurement. Moreover, the logical gates we construct, the most prominent examples being Toffoli and controlled-controlled-Z, often complete universal gate sets on their codes. We detail such universal constructions for the smallest quantum codes, the 5-qubit and 7-qubit codes, and then proceed to generalize the approach. One remarkable result of this generalization is that any nondegenerate stabilizer code with a complete set of fault-tolerant single-qubit Clifford gates has a universal set of fault-tolerant gates. Another is the interaction of logical qubits across different stabilizer codes, which, for instance, implies a broadly applicable method of code switching.Comment: 18 pages + 5 pages appendix, 12 figure

    The disjointness of stabilizer codes and limitations on fault-tolerant logical gates

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    Stabilizer codes are a simple and successful class of quantum error-correcting codes. Yet this success comes in spite of some harsh limitations on the ability of these codes to fault-tolerantly compute. Here we introduce a new metric for these codes, the disjointness, which, roughly speaking, is the number of mostly non-overlapping representatives of any given non-trivial logical Pauli operator. We use the disjointness to prove that transversal gates on error-detecting stabilizer codes are necessarily in a finite level of the Clifford hierarchy. We also apply our techniques to topological code families to find similar bounds on the level of the hierarchy attainable by constant depth circuits, regardless of their geometric locality. For instance, we can show that symmetric 2D surface codes cannot have non-local constant depth circuits for non-Clifford gates.Comment: 8+3 pages, 2 figures. Comments welcom

    Quantum Inference on Bayesian Networks

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    Performing exact inference on Bayesian networks is known to be #P-hard. Typically approximate inference techniques are used instead to sample from the distribution on query variables given the values ee of evidence variables. Classically, a single unbiased sample is obtained from a Bayesian network on nn variables with at most mm parents per node in time O(nmP(e)1)\mathcal{O}(nmP(e)^{-1}), depending critically on P(e)P(e), the probability the evidence might occur in the first place. By implementing a quantum version of rejection sampling, we obtain a square-root speedup, taking O(n2mP(e)12)\mathcal{O}(n2^mP(e)^{-\frac12}) time per sample. We exploit the Bayesian network's graph structure to efficiently construct a quantum state, a q-sample, representing the intended classical distribution, and also to efficiently apply amplitude amplification, the source of our speedup. Thus, our speedup is notable as it is unrelativized -- we count primitive operations and require no blackbox oracle queries.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to PR

    Higher order corrections to the hydrogen spectrum from the Standard-Model Extension

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    We have studied the effects of the Standard-Model Extension (SME) on hydrogen as a realization of new physics effects that incorporate Lorentz and CPT violation. Specifically, we calculated the SME-induced energy level shifts at order α2\alpha^2 times the SME parameters. We obtained contributions at this order both from the non-relativistic effective Hamiltonian for motion of a spin-1/2 particle in the presence of SME interactions and also from SME corrections to the propagator for exchange photons. We applied our result to the 2S1S2S-1S transition in hydrogen, which has been measured with extremely high precision. The results obtained in this work give the leading SME corrections for this transition.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
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