Contextuality of Quantum Error-Correcting Codes
Derek Khu, Andrew Tanggara, Chao Jin, Kishor Bharti

TL;DR
This paper establishes quantum contextuality as an intrinsic feature of certain quantum error-correcting codes, providing a new resource classification for fault-tolerant quantum computation and unifying different definitions of contextuality.
Contribution
It introduces a rigorous framework for contextuality in QEC, proves criteria for when codes are strongly contextual, and unifies existing definitions, advancing understanding of resources for universal quantum computation.
Findings
Subsystem stabilizer codes with multiple gauge qubits are strongly contextual.
Many code-switching protocols with universal gates are necessarily strongly contextual.
Unified mathematical framework for different notions of contextuality.
Abstract
Universal fault-tolerant quantum computation requires overcoming the Eastin--Knill theorem on quantum error correction (QEC) codes that protect information from noise. This is often accomplished through strategies like magic state distillation, which prepares computational resources -- namely, magic states -- whose power is rooted in quantum contextuality, a fundamental nonclassical feature generalizing Bell nonlocality. Yet, the broader role of contextuality in enabling universality, including its significance as an inherent feature of QEC codes and protocols themselves, has remained largely unexplored. In this work, we develop a rigorous framework for contextuality in QEC and prove three main results. Fundamentally, we show that subsystem stabilizer codes with two or more gauge qubits are strongly contextual in their partial closure, while others are noncontextual, establishing a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography
