Loss-tolerant concatenated Bell-state measurement with encoded
coherent-state qubits for long-range quantum communication
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2102.04071v3
- Date: Thu, 25 Feb 2021 01:55:13 GMT
- Title: Loss-tolerant concatenated Bell-state measurement with encoded
coherent-state qubits for long-range quantum communication
- Authors: Seok-Hyung Lee, Seung-Woo Lee, and Hyunseok Jeong
- Abstract summary: A coherent-state qubit is a promising candidate for optical quantum information processing.
We propose a hardware-efficientd BSM scheme with modified parity encoding.
We numerically show that the CBSM scheme achieves a success probability arbitrarily close to unity.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
- Abstract: The coherent-state qubit is a promising candidate for optical quantum
information processing due to its nearly-deterministic nature of the Bell-state
measurement (BSM). However, its non-orthogonality incurs difficulties such as
failure of the BSM. One may use a large amplitude ($\alpha$) for the coherent
state to minimize the failure probability, but the qubit then becomes more
vulnerable to dephasing by photon loss. We propose a hardware-efficient
concatenated BSM (CBSM) scheme with modified parity encoding using coherent
states with reasonably small amplitudes ($|\alpha| \lessapprox 2$), which
simultaneously suppresses both failures and dephasing in the BSM procedure. We
numerically show that the CBSM scheme achieves a success probability
arbitrarily close to unity for appropriate values of $\alpha$ and sufficiently
low photon loss rates (e.g., $\lessapprox 5\%$). Furthermore, we verify that
the quantum repeater scheme exploiting the CBSM scheme for quantum error
correction enables one to carry out efficient long-range quantum communication
over 1000 km. We show that the performance is comparable to those of other
up-to-date methods or even outperforms them for some cases. Finally, we present
methods to prepare logical qubits under modified parity encoding and implement
elementary logical operations, which consist of several physical-level
ingredients such as generation of Schr\"odinger's cat state and elementary
gates under coherent-state basis. Our work demonstrates that the encoded
coherent-state qubits in free-propagating fields provide an alternative route
to fault-tolerant information processing, especially long-range quantum
communication.
Related papers
- Dual-GSE: Resource-efficient Generalized Quantum Subspace Expansion [2.3847436897240453]
A generalized quantum subspace expansion (GSE) has been proposed that is significantly robust against coherent errors.
We propose a resource-efficient implementation of GSE, which we name "Dual-GSE"
Remarkably, Dual-GSE can further simulate larger quantum systems beyond the size of available quantum hardware.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-25T14:28:40Z) - Near-Term Distributed Quantum Computation using Mean-Field Corrections
and Auxiliary Qubits [77.04894470683776]
We propose near-term distributed quantum computing that involve limited information transfer and conservative entanglement production.
We build upon these concepts to produce an approximate circuit-cutting technique for the fragmented pre-training of variational quantum algorithms.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-11T18:00:00Z) - Quantum process tomography of continuous-variable gates using coherent
states [49.299443295581064]
We demonstrate the use of coherent-state quantum process tomography (csQPT) for a bosonic-mode superconducting circuit.
We show results for this method by characterizing a logical quantum gate constructed using displacement and SNAP operations on an encoded qubit.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-03-02T18:08:08Z) - Deep Quantum Error Correction [73.54643419792453]
Quantum error correction codes (QECC) are a key component for realizing the potential of quantum computing.
In this work, we efficiently train novel emphend-to-end deep quantum error decoders.
The proposed method demonstrates the power of neural decoders for QECC by achieving state-of-the-art accuracy.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-01-27T08:16:26Z) - Realization of real-time fault-tolerant quantum error correction [0.0]
We use a ten qubit QCCD trapped-ion quantum computer to encode a single logical qubit.
We measure an average logical SPAM error of $1.7(6) times 10-3$, compared to the average physical SPAM error $2.4(8) times 10-3$ of our qubits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-07-15T17:57:59Z) - Hardware-Efficient, Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computation with Rydberg
Atoms [55.41644538483948]
We provide the first complete characterization of sources of error in a neutral-atom quantum computer.
We develop a novel and distinctly efficient method to address the most important errors associated with the decay of atomic qubits to states outside of the computational subspace.
Our protocols can be implemented in the near-term using state-of-the-art neutral atom platforms with qubits encoded in both alkali and alkaline-earth atoms.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-05-27T23:29:53Z) - Automatically Differentiable Quantum Circuit for Many-qubit State
Preparation [1.5662820454886202]
We propose the automatically differentiable quantum circuit (ADQC) approach to efficiently prepare arbitrary quantum many-qubit states.
The circuit is optimized by updating the latent gates using back propagation to minimize the distance between the evolved and target states.
Our work sheds light on the "intelligent construction" of quantum circuits for many-qubit systems by combining with the machine learning methods.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-30T12:22:26Z) - Error rate reduction of single-qubit gates via noise-aware decomposition
into native gates [0.0]
knowledge of a qubit's initial quantum state and the standard parameters describing its decoherence can be leveraged to mitigate the noise present during the execution of a single-qubit gate.
We demonstrate a reduction of the single-qubit error rate by $38%$, from $1.6 times 10 -3$ to $1.0 times 10 -3$, provided the initial state of the input qubit is known.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-14T18:00:01Z) - Direct Quantum Communications in the Presence of Realistic Noisy
Entanglement [69.25543534545538]
We propose a novel quantum communication scheme relying on realistic noisy pre-shared entanglement.
Our performance analysis shows that the proposed scheme offers competitive QBER, yield, and goodput.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-12-22T13:06:12Z) - Fault-tolerant qubit from a constant number of components [1.0499611180329804]
Gate error rates in multiple technologies now below the threshold required for fault-tolerant quantum computation.
We propose a fault-tolerant quantum computing scheme that can nonetheless be assembled from a small number of experimental components.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-11-16T19:01:03Z) - Fault-tolerant Coding for Quantum Communication [71.206200318454]
encode and decode circuits to reliably send messages over many uses of a noisy channel.
For every quantum channel $T$ and every $eps>0$ there exists a threshold $p(epsilon,T)$ for the gate error probability below which rates larger than $C-epsilon$ are fault-tolerantly achievable.
Our results are relevant in communication over large distances, and also on-chip, where distant parts of a quantum computer might need to communicate under higher levels of noise.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-09-15T15:10:50Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.