A no-go theorem for a two-dimensional self-correcting quantum memory based on stabilizer codes
Sergey Bravyi, Barbara Terhal

TL;DR
This paper proves that stabilizer codes in 1D and 2D cannot serve as self-correcting quantum memories due to bounded energy barriers, highlighting fundamental limitations in low-dimensional quantum error correction.
Contribution
It establishes upper bounds on the code distance and energy barriers for stabilizer codes in low dimensions, showing their unsuitability for self-correction.
Findings
Code distance scales as O(L^{D-1}) in D dimensions.
Energy barriers are constant in 1D and 2D stabilizer codes.
Self-correcting quantum memory is impossible with stabilizer codes in D=1,2.
Abstract
We study properties of stabilizer codes that permit a local description on a regular D-dimensional lattice. Specifically, we assume that the stabilizer group of a code (the gauge group for subsystem codes) can be generated by local Pauli operators such that the support of any generator is bounded by a hypercube of constant size. Our first result concerns the optimal scaling of the distance with the linear size of the lattice . We prove an upper bound which is tight for D=1,2. This bound applies to both subspace and subsystem stabilizer codes. Secondly, we analyze the suitability of stabilizer codes for building a self-correcting quantum memory. Any stabilizer code with geometrically local generators can be naturally transformed to a local Hamiltonian penalizing states that violate the stabilizer condition. A degenerate ground-state of this Hamiltonian corresponds…
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