Applies modified 2-designs to design redundant syndrome measurements that maximize error separation in signal space for bit-flip, 5-qubit, and Steane codes, yielding cost and performance gains when measurement errors dominate.
2-Designs and Redundant Syndrome Extraction for Quantum Error Correction
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abstract
Imperfect measurement can degrade a quantum error correction scheme. A solution that restores fault tolerance is to add redundancy to the process of syndrome extraction. In this work, we show how to optimize this process for an arbitrary ratio of data qubit error probability to measurement error probability. The key is to design the measurements so that syndromes that correspond to different errors are separated by the maximum distance in the signal space, in close analogy to classical error correction codes. We find that the mathematical theory of 2-designs, appropriately modified, is the right tool for this. Analytical and simulation results for the bit-flip code, the 5-qubit code, and the Steane code are presented. The results show that design-based redundancy protocols show improvement in both cost and performance relative to conventional fault-tolerant error-correction schemes in situations, quite important in practice, where measure errors are common. In the near term, the construction of a fault-tolerant logical qubit with a small number of noisy physical qubits will benefit from targeted redundancy in syndrome extraction.
fields
quant-ph 1years
2019 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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2-Designs and Redundant Syndrome Extraction for Quantum Error Correction
Applies modified 2-designs to design redundant syndrome measurements that maximize error separation in signal space for bit-flip, 5-qubit, and Steane codes, yielding cost and performance gains when measurement errors dominate.