Fluxon-controlled quantum computer

2016 ◽  
Vol 14 (07) ◽  
pp. 1650040
Author(s):  
Toshiyuki Fujii ◽  
Shigemasa Matsuo ◽  
Noriyuki Hatakenaka

We propose a fluxon-controlled quantum computer incorporated with three-qubit quantum error correction using special gate operations, i.e. joint-phase and SWAP gate operations, inherent in capacitively coupled superconducting flux qubits. The proposed quantum computer acts exactly like a knitting machine at home.

2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (9&10) ◽  
pp. 743-778
Author(s):  
Muhammad Ahsan ◽  
Syed Abbas Zilqurnain Naqvi

We investigate the efficacy of topological quantum error-correction in correlated noise model which permits collective coupling of all the codeword qubits to the same non-Markovian environment. In this noise model, the probability distribution over set of phase-flipped qubits, decays sub-exponentially in the size of the set and carries non-trivial likelihood of the occurring large numbers of qubits errors. We find that in the presence of noise correlation, one cannot guarantee arbitrary high computational accuracy simply by incrementing the codeword size while retaining constant noise level per qubit operation. However, if instead, per-operation qubit error probability in an n-qubits long codeword is reduced O(\sqrt{n}) times below the accuracy threshold, arbitrarily accurate quantum computation becomes feasible with acceptable scaling of the codeword size. Our results suggest that progressively reducing noise level in qubits and gates is as important as continuously integrating more qubits to realize scalable and reliable quantum computer.


2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vickram N. Premakumar ◽  
Hele Sha ◽  
Daniel Crow ◽  
Eric Bach ◽  
Robert Joynt

Nature ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 595 (7867) ◽  
pp. 383-387
Author(s):  
◽  
Zijun Chen ◽  
Kevin J. Satzinger ◽  
Juan Atalaya ◽  
Alexander N. Korotkov ◽  
...  

AbstractRealizing the potential of quantum computing requires sufficiently low logical error rates1. Many applications call for error rates as low as 10−15 (refs. 2–9), but state-of-the-art quantum platforms typically have physical error rates near 10−3 (refs. 10–14). Quantum error correction15–17 promises to bridge this divide by distributing quantum logical information across many physical qubits in such a way that errors can be detected and corrected. Errors on the encoded logical qubit state can be exponentially suppressed as the number of physical qubits grows, provided that the physical error rates are below a certain threshold and stable over the course of a computation. Here we implement one-dimensional repetition codes embedded in a two-dimensional grid of superconducting qubits that demonstrate exponential suppression of bit-flip or phase-flip errors, reducing logical error per round more than 100-fold when increasing the number of qubits from 5 to 21. Crucially, this error suppression is stable over 50 rounds of error correction. We also introduce a method for analysing error correlations with high precision, allowing us to characterize error locality while performing quantum error correction. Finally, we perform error detection with a small logical qubit using the 2D surface code on the same device18,19 and show that the results from both one- and two-dimensional codes agree with numerical simulations that use a simple depolarizing error model. These experimental demonstrations provide a foundation for building a scalable fault-tolerant quantum computer with superconducting qubits.


2021 ◽  
Vol 103 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
B. D. Clader ◽  
Colin J. Trout ◽  
Jeff P. Barnes ◽  
Kevin Schultz ◽  
Gregory Quiroz ◽  
...  

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