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Symmetry breaking and error correction in open quantum systems

ORAL

Abstract

Symmetry-breaking transitions are a well-understood phenomenon of closed quantum systems in quantum optics, condensed matter, and high energy physics. However, symmetry breaking in open systems is less thoroughly understood, in part due to the richer steady-state and symmetry structure that such systems possess. For the prototypical open system---a Lindbladian---a unitary symmetry can be imposed in a "weak" or a "strong" way. We characterize the possible Z_n symmetry breaking transitions for both cases. In the case of Z_2, a weak-symmetry-broken phase guarantees at most a classical bit steady-state structure, while a strong-symmetry-broken phase admits a partially-protected steady-state qubit. Viewing photonic cat qubits through the lens of strong-symmetry breaking, we show how to dynamically recover the logical information after any gap-preserving strong-symmetric error; such recovery becomes perfect exponentially quickly in the number of photons. Our study forges a connection between driven-dissipative phase transitions and error correction.

Presenters

  • Simon Lieu

    National Institute of Standards and Technology

Authors

  • Simon Lieu

    National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Ron Belyansky

    University Of Maryland, College Park, University of Maryland, Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, College Park, University of Maryland, College Park

  • Jeremy Young

    Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, JILA, NIST and Department of Physics, University of Colorado, Boulder

  • Rex Lundgren

    University of Maryland, Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, College Park

  • Victor Albert

    NIST / QUICS @ UMD College Park, NIST/QUICS, UMD College Park, National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Alexey V Gorshkov

    University of Maryland, College Park, National Institute of Standards and Technology, JQI-NIST, Joint Quantum Institute and Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science, NIST/University of Maryland, College Park, Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland / NIST, NIST