Optimising Quantum Error Correction Using Morphing Circuits
Mackenzie H. Shaw, Barbara M. Terhal

TL;DR
This paper introduces morphing circuits to optimize quantum error correction by improving syndrome extraction circuits, connectivity, and fault-tolerance, leading to new codes with better parameters.
Contribution
It presents a novel method using morphing circuits for direct optimization of quantum error correction codes and syndrome extraction circuits, enhancing performance and connectivity.
Findings
Morphing circuits enable better code parameters and connectivity.
Alternating syndrome extraction circuits are easier to analyze fault-tolerantly.
New practical codes and circuits with improved properties are discovered.
Abstract
Quantum error correction (QEC) codes are traditionally defined and searched for without specifying the manner in which its syndrome extraction circuits are executed using elementary gates and measurements. We show how morphing circuits introduced in Refs. [1-3] provide a way of optimising syndrome extraction circuits and codes directly in terms of connectivity, choice of two-qubit gate (ISWAP versus CNOT) and number of physical qubits. We discuss morphing circuits in code optimisation among Abelian two-block group algebra (2BGA) codes, handling boundaries for 2D codes, codes with single-shot properties, and improving performance in stability experiments against measurement and reset errors. We show that alternating syndrome extraction circuits - executed with alternating time-reversed rounds - can be viewed as a two-round morphing circuit whose fault-tolerant properties are…
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