A SIMPLE OPERATOR QUANTUM ERROR CORRECTION SCHEME AVOIDING FULLY CORRELATED ERRORS

Author(s):  
CHIARA BAGNASCO ◽  
YASUSHI KONDO ◽  
MIKIO NAKAHARA
2008 ◽  
Vol 06 (supp01) ◽  
pp. 575-580
Author(s):  
T. ARIMITSU ◽  
T. HAYASHI ◽  
S. KITAJIMA ◽  
F. SHIBATA

It is shown that errors due to spatially correlated noises can be corrected by the quantum error-correction code and error-correction procedure prepared for those for independent noises. A model of noisy-channel which is under the influence of spatially correlated quantum Brownian motion is investigated within the framework of non-equilibrium thermo field dynamics that is a canonical operator formalism for dissipative quantum systems.


2004 ◽  
Vol 329 (4-5) ◽  
pp. 294-297
Author(s):  
Daxiu Wei ◽  
Jun Luo ◽  
Xianping Sun ◽  
Xizhi Zeng ◽  
Maili Liu

2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (1&2) ◽  
pp. 149-158
Author(s):  
Chi-Kwong Li ◽  
Mikio Nakahara ◽  
Yiu-Tung Poon ◽  
Nung-Sing Sze ◽  
Hiroyuki Tomita

It is known that one can do quantum error correction without syndrome measurement, which is often done in operator quantum error correction (OQEC). However, the physical realization could be challenging, especially when the recovery process involves high-rank projection operators and a superoperator. We use operator theory to improve OQEC so that the implementation can always be done by unitary gates followed by a partial trace operation. Examples are given to show that our error correction scheme outperforms the existing ones in various scenarios.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. McEwen ◽  
D. Kafri ◽  
Z. Chen ◽  
J. Atalaya ◽  
K. J. Satzinger ◽  
...  

AbstractQuantum computing can become scalable through error correction, but logical error rates only decrease with system size when physical errors are sufficiently uncorrelated. During computation, unused high energy levels of the qubits can become excited, creating leakage states that are long-lived and mobile. Particularly for superconducting transmon qubits, this leakage opens a path to errors that are correlated in space and time. Here, we report a reset protocol that returns a qubit to the ground state from all relevant higher level states. We test its performance with the bit-flip stabilizer code, a simplified version of the surface code for quantum error correction. We investigate the accumulation and dynamics of leakage during error correction. Using this protocol, we find lower rates of logical errors and an improved scaling and stability of error suppression with increasing qubit number. This demonstration provides a key step on the path towards scalable quantum computing.


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