Memory-corrected quantum repeaters with adaptive syndrome identification
Alena Romanova, Peter van Loock

TL;DR
This paper introduces a check matrix model for quantum repeaters with encoded memories, demonstrating that certain stabilizer codes significantly improve secret key rates and coherence times in quantum communication over long distances.
Contribution
It develops an analytical framework for incorporating stabilizer codes into quantum repeater analysis, showing the effectiveness of five-qubit and Steane codes in enhancing secret key rates.
Findings
Five-qubit code reduces phase flip errors from 1% to 0.001%.
Memory-corrected repeaters outperform unencoded ones in key generation.
Achieves secret key rates up to 4.85 Hz over 800 km with realistic parameters.
Abstract
We address the challenge of incorporating encoded quantum memories into an exact secret key rate analysis for small and intermediate-scale quantum repeaters. To this end, we introduce the check matrix model and quantify the resilience of stabilizer codes of up to eleven qubits against Pauli noise, obtaining analytical expressions for effective logical error probabilities. Generally, we find that the five-qubit and Steane codes either outperform more complex, larger codes in the experimentally relevant parameter regimes or have a lower resource overhead. Subsequently, we apply our results to calculate lower bounds on the asymptotic secret key rate in memory-corrected quantum repeaters when using the five-qubit or Steane codes on the memory qubits. The five-qubit code drastically increases the effective memory coherence time, reducing a phase flip probability of to when…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata
