thesis

Synthesis and evaluation of fault-tolerant quantum computer architectures

Abstract

Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2005.Includes bibliographical references (p. 241-247).Fault-tolerance is the cornerstone of practical, large-scale quantum computing, pushed into its prominent position with heroic theoretical efforts. The fault-tolerance threshold, which is the component failure probability below which arbitrarily reliable quantum computation becomes possible, is one standard quality measure of fault-tolerant designs based on recursive simulation. However, there is a gulf between theoretical achievements and the physical reality and complexity of envisioned quantum computing systems. This thesis takes a step toward bridging that gap. We develop a new experimental method for estimating fault-tolerance thresholds that applies to realistic models of quantum computer architectures, and demonstrate this technique numerically. We clarify a central problem for experimental approaches to fault-tolerance evaluation--namely, distinguishing between potentially optimistic pseudo-thresholds and actual thresholds that determine scalability. Next, we create a system architecture model for the trapped-ion quantum computer, discuss potential layouts, and numerically estimate the fault-tolerance threshold for this system when it is constrained to a local layout. Finally, we place the problem of evaluation and synthesis of fault-tolerant quantum computers into a broader framework by considering a software architecture for quantum computer design.by Andrew W. Cross.S.M

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