Locating Rydberg Decay Error in SWAP-LRU
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2503.01649v2
- Date: Mon, 24 Mar 2025 13:27:11 GMT
- Title: Locating Rydberg Decay Error in SWAP-LRU
- Authors: Cheng-Cheng Yu, Yu-Hao Deng, Ming-Cheng Chen, Chao-Yang Lu, Jian-Wei Pan,
- Abstract summary: leakage from Rydberg states during the implementation of multi-qubit gates induces two-qubit error chains.<n>We propose a hardware-efficient approach to deal with Rydberg decay errors using SWAP-LRU, augmented by final leakage detection to locate errors.<n>Our findings provide new insights into located error and pave the way for a resource-efficient strategy to achieve fault-tolerant quantum computation with neutral atom arrays.
- Score: 1.8242249887033675
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Achieving fault-tolerant quantum computing with neutral atoms necessitates addressing inherent errors, particularly leakage from Rydberg states during the implementation of multi-qubit gates. Such leakage induces two-qubit error chains, which degrades the error distance and compromise the performance of error correction. While existing solutions, such as hardware-specific protocols (Erasure Conversion) and circuit-based protocols, have demonstrated favorable error distances (d_e = d for pure Rydberg decay) and high error thresholds, they rely on significant additional hardware resources. In this work, we propose a hardware-efficient approach to deal with Rydberg decay errors using SWAP-LRU, augmented by final leakage detection to locate errors. No additional resource is needed to remove leakage and renew atoms. When all leakage can be detected, we propose a located decoder and demonstrate a high error threshold of 2.33% per CNOT gate and demonstrate improved error distances for pure Rydberg decay, outperforming traditional Pauli error models. Furthermore, we introduce an alternative but more hardware-efficient solution, critical decoder. It only requires one type of leakage to be detected, yet effectively eliminates the damaging effects of Rydberg decay on sub-threshold scaling. Our findings provide new insights into located error and pave the way for a resource-efficient strategy to achieve fault-tolerant quantum computation with neutral atom arrays.
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