Publication | Open Access
Fault Tolerance with Noisy and Slow Measurements and Preparation
37
Citations
21
References
2010
Year
Noise MitigationEngineeringMeasurementFault ToleranceError MitigationReliability EngineeringQuantum ComputingBad ThresholdUncertainty QuantificationCalibrationFault AnalysisSystems EngineeringFault RecoveryQuantum NetworkInstrumentationReliabilityQuantum ScienceQuantum AlgorithmComputer EngineeringQuantum RoutersFault Tolerant ControlError ThresholdQuantum Error MitigationMeasurement SpeedQuantum TransducersQuantum CharacterizationQuantum CompilersQuantum DevicesQuantum ValidationQuantum Error CorrectionQuantum Hardware
It is not so well known that measurement-free quantum error correction protocols can be designed to achieve fault-tolerant quantum computing. Despite their potential advantages in terms of the relaxation of accuracy, speed, and addressing requirements, they have usually been overlooked since they are expected to yield a very bad threshold. We show that this is not the case. We design fault-tolerant circuits for the 9-qubit Bacon-Shor code and find an error threshold for unitary gates and preparation of p((p,g)thresh)=3.76×10(-5) (30% of the best known result for the same code using measurement) while admitting up to 1/3 error rates for measurements and allocating no constraints on measurement speed. We further show that demanding gate error rates sufficiently below the threshold pushes the preparation threshold up to p((p)thresh)=1/3.
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