QVECTOR: an algorithm for device-tailored quantum error correction
Peter D. Johnson, Jonathan Romero, Jonathan Olson, Yudong Cao and, Al\'an Aspuru-Guzik

TL;DR
QVECTOR is a quantum error correction algorithm that uses variational techniques to tailor error correction to specific device noise, significantly improving quantum memory fidelity with minimal overhead.
Contribution
The paper introduces QVECTOR, a novel variational quantum error correction method that adapts to actual device noise, reducing overhead compared to traditional codes.
Findings
QVECTOR extends quantum memory T2 six-fold under phase damping noise.
It learns encoding and decoding circuits that exploit noise coherence.
Outperforms standard stabilizer codes in simulated noise models.
Abstract
Current approaches to fault-tolerant quantum computation will not enable useful quantum computation on near-term devices of 50 to 100 qubits. Leading proposals, such as the color code and surface code schemes, must devote a large fraction of their physical quantum bits to quantum error correction. Building from recent quantum machine learning techniques, we propose an alternative approach to quantum error correction aimed at reducing this overhead, which can be implemented in existing quantum hardware and on a myriad of quantum computing architectures. This method aims to optimize the average fidelity of encoding and recovery circuits with respect to the actual noise in the device, as opposed to that of an artificial or approximate noise model. The quantum variational error corrector (QVECTOR) algorithm employs a quantum circuit with parameters that are variationally-optimized according…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
