Cored product codes for quantum self-correction in three dimensions
ORAL
Abstract
The existence of self-correcting quantum memories in three dimensions is a long-standing open question at the interface between quantum computing and many-body physics. We take the perspective that large contributions to the entropy arising from fine-tuned spatial symmetries, including the assumption of an underlying regular lattice, are responsible for fundamental challenges to realizing self-correction. Accordingly, we introduce a class of disordered quantum codes, which we call ``cored product codes''. These codes are derived from classical factors via the hypergraph product but undergo a coring procedure which allows them to be embedded in a lower number of spatial dimensions while preserving code properties. As a specific example, we focus on a fractal code based on the aperiodic pinwheel tiling as the classical factor and perform finite temperature numerical simulations on the resulting three-dimensional quantum memory. We provide evidence that, below a critical temperature, the memory lifetime increases with system size for codes up to 60000 qubits. This talk is based on [1].
[1] Brenden Roberts, Jin Ming Koh, Yi Tan, and Norman Y. Yao, arXiv:2510.05479.
[1] Brenden Roberts, Jin Ming Koh, Yi Tan, and Norman Y. Yao, arXiv:2510.05479.
*This work was supported in part by NSF via the STAQ program and the QLCI program (grant no. OMA-2016245). B. R. acknowledges support from the Harvard Quantum Initiative Postdoctoral Fellowship in Science & Engineering. J. M. K. acknowledges support from the A*STAR Graduate Academy, Singapore. N. Y. Y. acknowledges support from a Simons Investigator award.
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Publication: Brenden Roberts, Jin Ming Koh, Yi Tan, and Norman Y. Yao, arXiv:2510.05479
Presenters
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Jin Ming Koh
- Harvard University