Lower overhead fault-tolerant building blocks for noisy quantum computers
Prithviraj Prabhu

TL;DR
This paper introduces new methods to significantly reduce the resource overhead in fault-tolerant quantum computing, making error correction more practical for noisy quantum devices.
Contribution
It presents combinatorial proofs for flag fault tolerance, optimized state preparation circuits, and improved error correction techniques that lower qubit and time overheads.
Findings
Exponentially reduces qubits needed for stabilizer measurements.
Achieves equivalent error protection with fewer physical qubits using a distance-four code.
Cuts logical gate measurement time by a factor of two to six.
Abstract
Quantum computation holds the promise of solving certain complex problems exponentially faster than classical computers. However, the high prevalent noise in current quantum devices impedes the accurate execution of even basic algorithms. This can be remedied by protecting quantum information with a quantum error-correcting code, where the logical information of an algorithmic qubit is spread across multiple physical qubits. Individual quantum errors are then located and corrected by the fault-tolerant measurement of multi-qubit stabilizer operators (parity checks). Unfortunately, error correction and fault tolerance both impose large demands on the qubit overhead: hundreds to thousands of physical qubits per logical qubit. We reduce the spacetime cost of fault tolerance by redesigning key building blocks of an error-corrected quantum computer. First, we develop a combinatorial proof…
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