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Automated discovery of autonomous quantum error correction schemes

ORAL

Abstract

We can encode a qubit in the energy levels of a quantum system. Relaxation and other dissipation processes lead to decay of the fidelity of this stored information. Is it possible to preserve the quantum information for a longer time by introducing additional drives and dissipation? The existence of autonomous quantum error correcting codes answers this question in the positive. Nonetheless, discovering these codes for a real physical system, i.e., finding the encoding and the associated driving fields and bath couplings, remains a challenge that has required intuition and inspiration to overcome. In this work, we develop and demonstrate a computational approach based on adjoint optimization for discovering autonomous quantum error correcting codes given a description of a physical system. We implement an optimizer that searches for a logical subspace and control parameters to better preserve quantum information. We demonstrate our method on a system of a harmonic oscillator coupled to a lossy qubit, and find that varying the Hamiltonian distance in Fock space -- a proxy for the control hardware complexity -- leads to discovery of different and new error correcting schemes. We discover what we call the \sqrt{3} code, realizable with a Hamiltonian distance d=2, and propose a hardware-efficient implementation based on superconducting circuits.

Publication: arXiv preprint arXiv:2108.02766

Presenters

  • Zhaoyou Wang

    Stanford Univ, Stanford University

Authors

  • Zhaoyou Wang

    Stanford Univ, Stanford University

  • Taha Rajabzadeh

    Stanford University

  • Nathan R Lee

    Stanford Univ

  • Amir Safavi-Naeini

    Stanford Univ, Stanford University