Oral: Realizing the Nishimori transition across the error threshold for constant-depth quantum circuits

ORAL

Abstract

Preparing quantum states across many qubits is necessary to unlock the full potential of quantum computers. However, a key challenge is to realize efficient preparation protocols which are stable to noise and gate imperfections. Here, using a measurement-based protocol on a 127 superconducting qubit device, we study the generation of the simplest long-range order -- Ising order, familiar from Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) states and the repetition code -- on 54 system qubits. Our efficient implementation of the constant-depth protocol and classical decoder shows higher fidelities for GHZ states compared to size-dependent, unitary protocols. By experimentally tuning coherent and incoherent error rates, we demonstrate stability of this decoded long-range order in two spatial dimensions, up to a critical point which corresponds to a transition belonging to the unusual Nishimori universality class. Although in classical systems Nishimori physics requires fine-tuning multiple parameters, here it arises as a direct result of the Born rule for measurement probabilities -- locking the effective temperature and disorder driving this transition. Our study exemplifies how measurement-based state preparation can be meaningfully explored on quantum processors beyond a hundred qubits.

*Key contributions made together with Guo-Yi Zhu (University of Cologne) and Ruben Verresen (Harvard University)

* The Cologne group was partially funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft under Germany's Excellence Strategy -- Cluster of Excellence Matter and Light for Quantum Computing (ML4Q) EXC 2004/1 -- 390534769 and within the CRC network TR 183 (Project Grant No. 277101999) as part of projects A04 and B01. The classical simulations were performed on the JUWELS cluster at the Forschungszentrum Juelich. R.V. is supported by the Harvard Quantum Initiative Postdoctoral Fellowship in Science and Engineering. A.V. is supported by a Simons Investigator grant and by NSF-DMR 2220703. A.V. and R.V. are supported by the Simons Collaboration on Ultra-Quantum Matter, which is a grant from the Simons Foundation (618615, A.V.). We acknowledge the use of IBM Quantum services for this work.

Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.02863

Presenters

  • Edward H Chen

    IBM Research

Authors

  • Edward H Chen

    IBM Research

  • Guo-Yi Zhu

    University of Cologne

  • Ruben Verresen

    Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University

  • Alireza Saif

    IBM Quantum

  • Elisa Bäumer

    ETH Zurich, IBM Quantum, IBM Research Zurich, IBM Research Zurich

  • David Layden

    IBM Research - Almaden

  • Nathanan Tantivasadakarn

    Caltech

  • Guanyu Zhu

    IBM TJ Watson Research Center

  • Sarah Sheldon

    IBM Quantum

  • Ashvin Vishwanath

    Harvard University

  • Simon Trebst

    University of Cologne

  • Abhinav Kandala

    IBM