Nature, volume 598, issue 7880, pages 281-286
Fault-tolerant control of an error-corrected qubit
Laird Egan
1, 2, 3
,
Dripto M. Debroy
4, 5
,
Crystal Noel
1, 2
,
Andrew Risinger
1, 2, 6
,
Daiwei Zhu
1, 2, 6
,
Debopriyo Biswas
1, 2
,
Michael Newman
5, 7
,
Muyuan Li
8, 9
,
Kenneth R. Brown
4, 7, 8, 9, 10
,
Marko Cetina
1, 2
,
Christopher Monroe
1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7
3
IonQ, Inc, College Park, USA
|
5
Google Research, Venice, USA
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-10-04
Multidisciplinary
Abstract
Quantum error correction protects fragile quantum information by encoding it into a larger quantum system1,2. 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 practice3–6. 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 threshold7, 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. Fault-tolerant circuits for the control of a logical qubit encoded in 13 trapped ion qubits through a Bacon–Shor quantum error correction code are demonstrated.
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