Weakly Fault-Tolerant Computation in a Quantum Error-Detecting Code
ORAL
Abstract
Many quantum error correcting codes that achieve full fault-tolerance suffer from low ratios of logical to physical qubits and add significant overhead to encoded computations. This makes them difficult to implement on current noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computers and results in the inability to perform quantum algorithms at useful scales with near-term quantum processors. Due to this, current calculations are generally done without encoding. We propose a middle ground between these two approaches: constructions in the [[n,n-2,2]] quantum error detecting code that can detect any error from a single faulty gate by measuring the stabilizer generators of the code and additional ancillas at the end of the computation. This achieves what we call weak fault-tolerance. As we show, this demonstrates a significant improvement over no error correction for low enough physical error probabilities and requires much less overhead than codes that achieve full fault-tolerance. We give constructions for a set of gates that achieve universal quantum computation in this error detecting code, while satisfying weak fault-tolerance up to analog errors on the physical rotation gate.
* This work was supported by NSF Grants 1719778 and 1911089.
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Presenters
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Todd A Brun
University of Southern California
Authors
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Todd A Brun
University of Southern California
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Christopher Gerhard
University of Southern California