Error-correction and noise-decoherence thresholds for coherent errors in planar-graph surface codes

Abstract

We numerically study coherent errors in surface codes on planar graphs, focusing on noise of the form of Z- or X-rotations of individual qubits. We find that, similarly to the case of incoherent bit- and phase-flips, a trade-off between resilience against coherent X- and Z-rotations can be made via the connectivity of the graph. However, our results indicate that, unlike in the incoherent case, the error-correction thresholds for the various graphs do not approach a universal bound. We also study the distribution of final states after error correction. We show that graphs fall into three distinct classes, each resulting in qualitatively distinct final-state distributions. In particular, we show that a graph class exists where the logical-level noise exhibits a decoherence threshold slightly above the error-correction threshold. In these classes, therefore, the logical level noise above the error-correction threshold can retain significant amount of coherence even for large-distance codes. To perform our analysis, we develop a Majorana-fermion representation of planar-graph surface codes and describe the characterization of logical-state storage using fermion-linear-optics-based simulations. We thereby generalize the approach introduced for the square lattice by Bravyi et al. [npj Quantum Inf. 4, 55 (2018)] to surface codes on general planar graphs.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…