TL;DR
This paper analyzes error thresholds for arbitrary Pauli noise in quantum channels, demonstrating how entangled graph states can surpass traditional bounds, and introduces new quantum codes with improved error correction capabilities.
Contribution
It provides numerical bounds on error thresholds for Pauli channels, develops a symmetry-based algorithm for graph states, and introduces novel tree graph codes with superior performance.
Findings
Significant threshold increases for biased noise channels.
Efficient symmetry-based algorithm for large graph states.
New tree graph codes outperform existing codes in certain regimes.
Abstract
The error threshold of a one-parameter family of quantum channels is defined as the largest noise level such that the quantum capacity of the channel remains positive. This in turn guarantees the existence of a quantum error correction code for noise modeled by that channel. Discretizing the single-qubit errors leads to the important family of Pauli quantum channels; curiously, multipartite entangled states can increase the threshold of these channels beyond the so-called hashing bound, an effect termed superadditivity of coherent information. In this work, we divide the simplex of Pauli channels into one-parameter families and compute numerical lower bounds on their error thresholds. We find substantial increases of error thresholds relative to the hashing bound for large regions in the Pauli simplex corresponding to biased noise, which is a realistic noise model in promising quantum…
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