Resilience of quantum random access memory to generic noise
Connor T. Hann, Gideon Lee, S. M. Girvin, Liang Jiang

TL;DR
This paper proves that the bucket brigade QRAM architecture maintains noise resilience under general noise models, enabling high-fidelity quantum memory queries on current hardware without error correction.
Contribution
It provides a rigorous proof of noise resilience for the bucket brigade QRAM under arbitrary errors and demonstrates its practicality with numerical simulations.
Findings
Favorable infidelity scaling holds for arbitrary error channels.
QRAM can be implemented with existing hardware without quantum error correction.
Benefits of the architecture persist with quantum error correction, improving efficiency.
Abstract
Quantum random access memory (QRAM)--memory which stores classical data but allows queries to be performed in superposition--is required for the implementation of numerous quantum algorithms. While naive implementations of QRAM are highly susceptible to decoherence and hence not scalable, it has been argued that the bucket brigade QRAM architecture [Giovannetti et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 100 160501 (2008)] is highly resilient to noise, with the infidelity of a query scaling only logarithmically with the memory size. In prior analyses, however, this favorable scaling followed directly from the use of contrived noise models, thus leaving open the question of whether experimental implementations would actually enjoy the purported scaling advantage. In this work, we study the effects of decoherence on QRAM in full generality. Our main result is a proof that this favorable infidelity scaling…
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