Designing the Quantum Channels Induced by Diagonal Gates
Jingzhen Hu, Qingzhong Liang, and Robert Calderbank

TL;DR
This paper develops a framework to analyze the logical channels induced by diagonal quantum gates on CSS codes, providing conditions for code preservation and characterizing codes invariant under specific transversal rotations.
Contribution
It introduces generator coefficients to describe the interaction of diagonal gates with CSS codes and derives conditions for code preservation and invariance under transversal rotations.
Findings
Derived necessary and sufficient conditions for diagonal gates to preserve CSS codes.
Explicit expression of the induced logical operator for arbitrary diagonal gates.
Characterization of CSS codes invariant under transversal $Z$-rotations from Reed-Muller codes.
Abstract
The challenge of quantum computing is to combine error resilience with universal computation. Diagonal gates such as the transversal gate play an important role in implementing a universal set of quantum operations. This paper introduces a framework that describes the process of preparing a code state, applying a diagonal physical gate, measuring a code syndrome, and applying a Pauli correction that may depend on the measured syndrome (the average logical channel induced by an arbitrary diagonal gate). It focuses on CSS codes, and describes the interaction of code states and physical gates in terms of generator coefficients determined by the induced logical operator. The interaction of code states and diagonal gates depends very strongly on the signs of -stabilizers in the CSS code, and the proposed generator coefficient framework explicitly includes this degree of freedom. The…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks · Quantum Information and Cryptography
