Entanglement-assisted quantum turbo codes
Mark M. Wilde, Min-Hsiu Hsieh, and Zunaira Babar

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that entanglement assistance enables quantum turbo codes to simultaneously possess recursive and non-catastrophic properties, significantly improving their performance and reliability in quantum communication.
Contribution
It introduces entanglement-assisted quantum turbo codes that overcome a key theoretical limitation, and modifies decoding algorithms to enhance performance.
Findings
Entanglement-assisted quantum turbo codes outperform standard codes by 4.73 dB.
Proven that entanglement enables codes to be both recursive and non-catastrophic.
Quantum turbo codes are within 1 dB of their hashing limits.
Abstract
An unexpected breakdown in the existing theory of quantum serial turbo coding is that a quantum convolutional encoder cannot simultaneously be recursive and non-catastrophic. These properties are essential for quantum turbo code families to have a minimum distance growing with blocklength and for their iterative decoding algorithm to converge, respectively. Here, we show that the entanglement-assisted paradigm simplifies the theory of quantum turbo codes, in the sense that an entanglement-assisted quantum (EAQ) convolutional encoder can possess both of the aforementioned desirable properties. We give several examples of EAQ convolutional encoders that are both recursive and non-catastrophic and detail their relevant parameters. We then modify the quantum turbo decoding algorithm of Poulin et al., in order to have the constituent decoders pass along only "extrinsic information" to each…
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