Low-distance surface codes under realistic quantum noise 论文

2014Physical Review A引用 291
Quantum Computing Algorithms and ArchitectureQuantum Information and CryptographyQuantum and electron transport phenomena

摘要

Experimental implementation of the surface code will be a significant milestone for quantum computing. We develop a circuit and a decoder targeted for near-term implementation of a distance-3 surface code. We simulate the code under amplitude and phase damping and compare the threshold to a Pauli-twirl approximation. We find that the approximation yields a pessimistic threshold estimate. From numerical Monte Carlo simulations, we identify the gate and measurement speeds required to achieve reliable error correction. For superconductor devices, a qubit encoded in a 17-qubit surface code demonstrates a lower error rate than an unencoded qubit assuming gate times of 5--40 ns and ${T}_{1}$ times of at least 1--2 $\ensuremath{\mu}\mathrm{s}$. If ${T}_{1}\ensuremath{\ge}10$ ns, the difference is significant and can be experimentally measured, allowing near-term implementation and verification of a small surface code. For ion trap devices, gates times of 1 $\ensuremath{\mu}\mathrm{s}$ and ${T}_{1}\ensuremath{\ge}40$ ms admit measurable differences in error rate.