Matching and maximum likelihood decoding of a multi-round subsystem
quantum error correction experiment
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2203.07205v2
- Date: Wed, 20 Apr 2022 01:38:38 GMT
- Title: Matching and maximum likelihood decoding of a multi-round subsystem
quantum error correction experiment
- Authors: Neereja Sundaresan, Theodore J. Yoder, Youngseok Kim, Muyuan Li,
Edward H. Chen, Grace Harper, Ted Thorbeck, Andrew W. Cross, Antonio D.
C\'orcoles, Maika Takita
- Abstract summary: We perform quantum error correction on superconducting qubits connected in a heavy-hexagon lattice.
Full processor can encode a logical qubit with distance three and perform several rounds of fault-tolerant syndrome measurements.
We show that the logical error varies depending on the use of a perfect matching decoder.
- Score: 1.2189422792863451
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Quantum error correction offers a promising path for performing quantum
computations with low errors. Although a fully fault-tolerant execution of a
quantum algorithm remains unrealized, recent experimental developments, along
with improvements in control electronics, are enabling increasingly advanced
demonstrations of the necessary operations for applying quantum error
correction. Here, we perform quantum error correction on superconducting qubits
connected in a heavy-hexagon lattice. The full processor can encode a logical
qubit with distance three and perform several rounds of fault-tolerant syndrome
measurements that allow the correction of any single fault in the circuitry.
Furthermore, by using dynamic circuits and classical computation as part of our
syndrome extraction protocols, we can exploit real-time feedback to reduce the
impact of energy relaxation error in the syndrome and flag qubits. We show that
the logical error varies depending on the use of a perfect matching decoder
compared to a maximum likelihood decoder. We observe a logical error per
syndrome measurement round as low as $\sim0.04$ for the matching decoder and as
low as $\sim0.03$ for the maximum likelihood decoder. Our results suggest that
more significant improvements to decoders are likely on the horizon as quantum
hardware has reached a new stage of development towards fully fault-tolerant
operations.
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