4.8 Article

Fault-tolerant control of an error-corrected qubit

期刊

NATURE
卷 598, 期 7880, 页码 281-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03928-y

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资金

  1. ARO through the IARPA LogiQ programme
  2. NSF STAQ Program
  3. AFOSR MURIs on Dissipation Engineering in Open Quantum Systems and Quantum Interactive Protocols for Quantum Computation
  4. ARO MURI on Modular Quantum Circuits
  5. NSF [DMR-1747426]

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Quantum error correction encodes information into a larger quantum system to protect it, and fault-tolerant circuits are essential for controlling logical qubits and suppressing errors. Experimental demonstration of fault-tolerant circuits for a Bacon-Shor logical qubit with trapped ion qubits shows significant reductions in error rates in the presence of noise. This indicates the potential of fault-tolerant circuits to enable highly accurate logical primitives in current quantum systems, with the possibility of achieving a stabilized logical qubit through improved gate operations and measurements.
Quantum error correction protects fragile quantum information by encoding it into a larger quantum system(1,2). These extra degrees of freedom enable the detection and correction of errors, but also increase the control complexity of the encoded logical qubit. Fault-tolerant circuits contain the spread of errors while controlling the logical qubit, and are essential for realizing error suppression in practice(3-6). Although fault-tolerant design works in principle, it has not previously been demonstrated in an error-corrected physical system with native noise characteristics. Here we experimentally demonstrate fault-tolerant circuits for the preparation, measurement, rotation and stabilizer measurement of a Bacon-Shor logical qubit using 13 trapped ion qubits. When we compare these fault-tolerant protocols to non-fault-tolerant protocols, we see significant reductions in the error rates of the logical primitives in the presence of noise. The result of fault-tolerant design is an average state preparation and measurement error of 0.6 per cent and a Clifford gate error of 0.3 per cent after offline error correction. In addition, we prepare magic states with fidelities that exceed the distillation threshold(7), demonstrating all of the key single-qubit ingredients required for universal fault-tolerant control. These results demonstrate that fault-tolerant circuits enable highly accurate logical primitives in current quantum systems. With improved two-qubit gates and the use of intermediate measurements, a stabilized logical qubit can be achieved.

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