Entangling logical qubits without physical operations
Jin Ming Koh, Anqi Gong, Andrei C. Diaconu, Daniel Bochen Tan, Alexandra A. Geim, Michael J. Gullans, Norman Y. Yao, Mikhail D. Lukin, Shayan Majidy

TL;DR
This paper introduces phantom codes, a new class of quantum error-correcting codes that enable entangling logical qubits without physical two-qubit gates, significantly reducing error rates and overheads in fault-tolerant quantum computing.
Contribution
The paper systematically identifies and constructs phantom codes that realize logical entangling gates through relabeling, avoiding physical operations and improving scalability.
Findings
Achieved 10- to 100-fold reduction in logical infidelity for key quantum tasks.
Demonstrated scalability advantages over surface codes in simulations.
Provided a systematic framework for exploring quantum error-correcting codes.
Abstract
Fault-tolerant logical entangling gates are essential for scalable quantum computing, but are limited by the error rates and overheads of physical two-qubit gates and measurements. To address this limitation, we introduce phantom codes-quantum error-correcting codes that realize entangling gates between all logical qubits in a code block purely through relabelling of physical qubits during compilation, yielding perfect fidelity with no spatial or temporal overhead. We present a systematic study of such codes. First, we identify phantom codes using complementary numerical and analytical approaches. We exhaustively enumerate all inequivalent CSS codes up to and identify additional instances up to via SAT-based methods. We then construct higher-distance phantom-code families using quantum Reed-Muller codes and the binarization of qudit codes. Across all…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata
