Quantum advantages for syndrome-aware noisy logical observable estimation

Abstract

Recent progress in fault-tolerant quantum computing suggests that leveraging error-syndrome information at the logical layer can substantially improve performance, including the estimation of logical observables from noisy states. In this work, based on quantum estimation theory, we develop an information-theoretic framework to quantify the utility of error syndromes for noisy logical observable estimation. We distinguish two operational regimes of such syndrome-aware protocols: classical protocols, in which the logical measurement basis is fixed and syndrome information is used only in classical post-processing, and quantum protocols, in which the logical quantum control can be tailored to depend on the observed error syndrome. For classical syndrome-aware protocols, we prove a universal limitation: on average, syndrome information can improve the effective logical error rate by at most a factor of two, implying at most a quadratic reduction in sampling overhead. In contrast, once syndrome-conditioned quantum control is permitted, we demonstrate that the effective logical error rate decays exponentially with the number of code blocks. These findings provide fundamental guidance for designing future fault-tolerant architectures that actively exploit syndrome records rather than discarding them after decoding.

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