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Fault-Tolerant Logical Gates in the IBM Quantum Experience

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abstract

Quantum computers will require encoding of quantum information to protect them from noise. Fault-tolerant quantum computing architectures illustrate how this might be done but have not yet shown a conclusive practical advantage. Here we demonstrate that a small but useful error detecting code improves the fidelity of the fault-tolerant gates implemented in the code space as compared to the fidelity of physically equivalent gates implemented on physical qubits. By running a randomized benchmarking protocol in the logical code space of the [4,2,2] code, we observe an order of magnitude improvement in the infidelity of the gates, with the two-qubit infidelity dropping from 5.8(2)% to 0.60(3)%. Our results are consistent with fault-tolerance theory and conclusively demonstrate the benefit of carrying out computation in a code space that can detect errors. Although the fault-tolerant gates offer an impressive improvement in fidelity, the computation as a whole is not below the fault-tolerance threshold because of noise associated with state preparation and measurement on this device.

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quant-ph 1

years

2024 1

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ACCEPT 1

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Fault-tolerant quantum computation with a neutral atom processor

quant-ph · 2024-11-18 · accept · novelty 7.0

A 256-atom neutral ytterbium processor demonstrates fault-tolerant entanglement of 24 logical qubits and runs Bernstein-Vazirani on 28 logical qubits with better-than-physical error rates using erasure conversion.

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  • Fault-tolerant quantum computation with a neutral atom processor quant-ph · 2024-11-18 · accept · none · ref 28 · internal anchor

    A 256-atom neutral ytterbium processor demonstrates fault-tolerant entanglement of 24 logical qubits and runs Bernstein-Vazirani on 28 logical qubits with better-than-physical error rates using erasure conversion.