Detecting bit-flip errors in a logical qubit using stabilizer measurements
D. Rist\`e, S. Poletto, M.-Z. Huang, A. Bruno, V. Vesterinen, O.-P., Saira, L. DiCarlo

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates real-time detection of bit-flip errors in a logical qubit using stabilizer measurements on a superconducting processor, advancing quantum error correction techniques essential for fault-tolerant quantum computing.
Contribution
It introduces a method to perform stabilizer measurements as parallelized indirect measurements with ancillary qubits, showing non-demolition error detection in a superconducting quantum processor.
Findings
Successfully implemented stabilizer measurements for a three-qubit repetition code
Generated three-qubit entanglement from superposition states
Detected bit-flip errors with evidence of non-demolition measurements
Abstract
Quantum data is susceptible to decoherence induced by the environment and to errors in the hardware processing it. A future fault-tolerant quantum computer will use quantum error correction (QEC) to actively protect against both. In the smallest QEC codes, the information in one logical qubit is encoded in a two-dimensional subspace of a larger Hilbert space of multiple physical qubits. For each code, a set of non-demolition multi-qubit measurements, termed stabilizers, can discretize and signal physical qubit errors without collapsing the encoded information. Experimental demonstrations of QEC to date, using nuclear magnetic resonance, trapped ions, photons, superconducting qubits, and NV centers in diamond, have circumvented stabilizers at the cost of decoding at the end of a QEC cycle. This decoding leaves the quantum information vulnerable to physical qubit errors until re-encoding,…
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