Circuit-level fault tolerance of cat codes
Long D. H. My, Shushen Qin, Hui Khoon Ng

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the circuit-level fault tolerance of rotationally symmetric bosonic codes, like cat codes, revealing stringent noise thresholds but proposing methods to achieve practical fault-tolerant quantum error correction.
Contribution
It extends fault tolerance concepts to RSB codes and evaluates their performance under circuit-level noise, providing strategies to meet realistic hardware constraints.
Findings
Fault-tolerance thresholds are more stringent than previous idealized models.
Waiting-time optimization and squeezing can improve noise resilience.
Analysis applies broadly to RSB codes beyond cat codes.
Abstract
Bosonic codes encode quantum information into a single infinite-dimensional physical system endowed with error correction capabilities. This reduces the need for complex management of many physical constituents compared with standard approaches employing multiple physical qubits. Recent discussions of bosonic codes centre around correcting only boson-loss errors, with phase errors either actively suppressed or deferred to subsequent layers of encoding with standard qubit codes. Rotationally symmetric bosonic (RSB) codes, which include the well-known cat and binomial codes, are capable of simultaneous correction of loss and phase errors, offering an alternate route that deals with arbitrary errors already at the base layer. Here, we investigate the robustness of such codes, moving away from the more idealistic past studies towards a circuit-level noise analysis closer to the practical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Effects in Electronics · Advanced Data Storage Technologies · Advancements in Semiconductor Devices and Circuit Design
