Demonstrating Quantum Error Correction that Extends the Lifetime of Quantum Information
Nissim Ofek, Andrei Petrenko, Reinier Heeres, Philip Reinhold, Zaki, Leghtas, Brian Vlastakis, Yehan Liu, Luigi Frunzio, S. M. Girvin, Liang, Jiang, Mazyar Mirrahimi, M. H. Devoret, R. J. Schoelkopf

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a quantum error correction system that surpasses the natural lifetime of qubits, achieving the break-even point by using real-time feedback to encode, monitor, and correct quantum information in superconducting resonators.
Contribution
It presents the first experimental demonstration of reaching the quantum error correction break-even point with a superconducting resonator system using a full QEC protocol.
Findings
Enhanced quantum information lifetime by 20 times over transmon qubits
Achieved a 320 microsecond lifetime for encoded quantum information
Demonstrated real-time feedback for full quantum error correction
Abstract
The remarkable discovery of Quantum Error Correction (QEC), which can overcome the errors experienced by a bit of quantum information (qubit), was a critical advance that gives hope for eventually realizing practical quantum computers. In principle, a system that implements QEC can actually pass a "break-even" point and preserve quantum information for longer than the lifetime of its constituent parts. Reaching the break-even point, however, has thus far remained an outstanding and challenging goal. Several previous works have demonstrated elements of QEC in NMR, ions, nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers, photons, and superconducting transmons. However, these works primarily illustrate the signatures or scaling properties of QEC codes rather than test the capacity of the system to extend the lifetime of quantum information over time. Here we demonstrate a QEC system that reaches the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
