4.8 Article

Realization of three-qubit quantum error correction with superconducting circuits

Journal

NATURE
Volume 482, Issue 7385, Pages 382-385

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature10786

Keywords

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Funding

  1. LPS/NSA under ARO [W911NF-09-1-0514]
  2. NSF [DMR-0653377, DMR-1004406]
  3. CNR-Istituto di Cibernetica, Pozzuoli, Italy
  4. Swiss NSF
  5. Dutch NWO
  6. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  7. Division Of Materials Research [1004406] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Quantum computers could be used to solve certain problems exponentially faster than classical computers, but are challenging to build because of their increased susceptibility to errors. However, it is possible to detect and correct errors without destroying coherence, by using quantum error correcting codes(1). The simplest of these are three-quantum-bit (three-qubit) codes, which map a one-qubit state to an entangled three-qubit state; they can correct any single phase-flip or bit-flip error on one of the three qubits, depending on the code used(2). Here we demonstrate such phase-and bit-flip error correcting codes in a superconducting circuit. We encode a quantum state(3,4), induce errors on the qubits and decode the error syndrome-a quantum state indicating which error has occurred-by reversing the encoding process. This syndrome is then used as the input to a three-qubit gate that corrects the primary qubit if it was flipped. As the code can recover from a single error on any qubit, the fidelity of this process should decrease only quadratically with error probability. We implement the correcting three-qubit gate (known as a conditional-conditional NOT, or Toffoli, gate) in 63 nanoseconds, using an interaction with the third excited state of a single qubit. We find 85 +/- 1 per cent fidelity to the expected classical action of this gate, and 78 +/- 1 per cent fidelity to the ideal quantum process matrix. Using this gate, we perform a single pass of both quantum bit- and phase-flip error correction and demonstrate the predicted first-order insensitivity to errors. Concatenation of these two codes in a nine-qubit device would correct arbitrary single-qubit errors. In combination with recent advances in superconducting qubit coherence times(5,6), this could lead to scalable quantum technology.

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