Estimating Low Logical Error Rates from Few Syndrome Extraction Cycles
ORAL
Abstract
Quantum error correcting codes allow quantum information to be protected
against physical qubit noise. One (or a few) logical qubits are encoded within
many physical qubits, and then actively monitored using syndrome
measurements, so that as long as the physical qubits’ error rate is below a critical
threshold, the logical qubits error rate is suppressed far below the physical
qubits’ error rate. In repetition codes, protection against a limited set of errors has
been demonstrated experimentally down to the extraordinarily low rate of 1e-
10/cycle. Measuring and verifying such extraordinary low failure rates requires
an extraordinary amount of effort and data. We investigate whether very low
logical error rates can be estimated accurately using far less data, by analyzing
the syndrome data used to perform error correction. We demonstrate that when
physical qubit noise is restricted to weight-1 and weight-2 errors, we can
accurately estimate a repetition code logical error rate of E using data from N <<
O(1/E) cycles of syndrome extraction. The naïve approach, counting logical
errors, requires O(1/E) cycles. We verify that our estimation strategy is robust to
varying the decoder, deploy it on data from real quantum testbeds, and consider
its extension to fully quantum codes like the surface code.
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Presenters
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Aditya Dhumuntarao
Sandia National Laboratories
Authors
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Aditya Dhumuntarao
Sandia National Laboratories
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Robin Blume-Kohout
Sandia National Laboratories
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Kenneth M Rudinger
Sandia National Laboratories
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Kevin Young
Sandia National Laboratories