Leakage suppression in the toric code
(pp0997-1016)
Martin
Suchara, Andrew W. Cross, Jay M. Gambetta
doi:
https://doi.org/10.26421/QIC15.11-12-8
Abstracts:
Quantum codes excel at correcting local noise but fail to correct
leakage faults that excite qubits to states outside the computational
space. Aliferis and Terhal [1] have shown that an accuracy threshold
exists for leakage faults using gadgets called leakage reduction units (LRUs).
However, these gadgets reduce the accuracy threshold and increase
overhead and experimental complexity, and these costs have not been
thoroughly understood. We explore a variety of techniques for
leakage-resilient, fault-tolerant error correction in topological codes.
Our contributions are threefold. First, we develop a leakage model that
is physically motivated and efficient to simulate. Second, we use
Monte-Carlo simulations to survey several syndrome extraction circuits.
Third, given the capability to perform 3-outcome measurements, we
present a dramatically improved syndrome processing algorithm. Our
simulations show that simple circuits with one extra CNOT per check
operator and no additional ancillas reduce the accuracy threshold by
less than a factor of 4 when leakage and depolarizing noise rates are
comparable. This becomes a factor of 2 when the decoder uses 3-outcome
measurements. Finally, when the physical error rate is less than 2 ื
10−4 , placing LRUs after every gate may achieve the lowest logical
error rates of all of the circuits we considered. We anticipate that the
closely related planar codes might exhibit the same accuracy thresholds
and that the ideas may generalize naturally to other topological codes.
Key words:
fault-tolerant quantum computing, leakage errors,
accuracy threshold, topological codes, syndrome processing algorithms
|