Synchronization for Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computers
Satvik Maurya, Swamit Tannu

TL;DR
This paper introduces synchronization policies for logical qubits in fault-tolerant quantum computers, significantly reducing error rates and decoding latency by aligning syndrome generation cycles.
Contribution
It proposes Passive, Active, and Hybrid synchronization policies that improve fault tolerance and decoding speed in surface code quantum computing.
Findings
Active policy reduces logical error rate by up to 2.4x.
Hybrid policy reduces logical error rate by up to 3.4x.
Synchronization policies enable up to 2.2x speedup in decoding latency.
Abstract
Quantum Error Correction (QEC) codes store information reliably in logical qubits by encoding them in a larger number of less reliable qubits. The surface code, known for its high resilience to physical errors, is a leading candidate for fault-tolerant quantum computing (FTQC). Logical qubits encoded with the surface code can be in different phases of their syndrome generation cycle, thereby introducing desynchronization in the system. This can occur due to the production of non-Clifford states, dropouts due to fabrication defects, and the use of other QEC codes with the surface code to reduce resource requirements. Logical operations require the syndrome generation cycles of the logical qubits involved to be synchronized. This requires the leading qubit to pause or slow down its cycle, allowing more errors to accumulate before the next cycle, thereby increasing the risk of…
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