4.6 Article

Low-Overhead Fault-Tolerant Quantum Error Correction with the Surface-GKP Code

Journal

PRX QUANTUM
Volume 3, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PRXQuantum.3.010315

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In this work, we propose a highly effective use of the surface Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill (GKP) code, which reduces the total failure rate and achieves a low logical failure rate. By combining GKP code with the surface code, the threshold GKP squeezing is determined under the assumption of dominant noise source. The use of space-time correlated edges and dynamically computed edge weights in the matching graphs enables the realization of highly squeezed GKP states with conservative experimental parameters.
Fault-tolerant quantum error correction is essential for implementing quantum algorithms of significant practical importance. In this work, we propose a highly effective use of the surface Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill (GKP) code, i.e., the surface code consisting of bosonic GKP qubits instead of bare two-level qubits. In our proposal, we use error-corrected two-qubit gates between GKP qubits and introduce a maximum-likelihood decoding strategy for correcting shift errors in the two-GKP-qubit gates. Our proposed decoding reduces the total CNOT failure rate of the GKP qubits, e.g., from 0.87% to 0.36% at a GKP squeezing of 12 dB, compared to the case where the simple closest-integer decoding is used. Then, by concatenating the GKP code with the surface code, we find that the threshold GKP squeezing is given by 9.9 dB under the the assumption that finite squeezing of the GKP states is the dominant noise source. More importantly, we show that a low logical failure rate p(L) < 10(-7) can be achieved with moderate hardware requirements, e.g., 291 modes and 97 qubits at a GKP squeezing of 12 dB as opposed to 1457 bare qubits for the standard rotated surface code at an equivalent noise level (i.e., p = 0.36%). Such a low failure rate of our surface-GKP code is possible through the use of space-time correlated edges in the matching graphs of the surface-code decoder. Further, all edge weights in the matching graphs are computed dynamically based on analog information from the GKP error correction using the full history of all syndrome measurement rounds. We also show that a highly squeezed GKP state of GKP squeezing greater than or similar to 12 dB can be experimentally realized by using a dissipative stabilization method, namely, the big-small-big method, with fairly conservative experimental parameters. Lastly, we introduce a three-level ancilla scheme to mitigate ancilla decay errors during a GKP state preparation.

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