Publication | Open Access
Quantum error correction for beginners
732
Citations
157
References
2013
Year
Quantum ScienceDetailed GuideQuantum ComputingPhysicsEngineeringNatural SciencesQuantum Machine LearningQuantum Optimization AlgorithmQuantum AlgorithmComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceQuantum EntanglementError CorrectionQuantum Error CorrectionQuantum Algorithms
Quantum error correction and fault‑tolerant quantum computation are vital theoretical aspects of quantum information processing that address the fragility of coherent quantum systems, and since 1995 many new codes, techniques, and methodologies have been developed to enable large‑scale quantum algorithms. The authors aim to provide a basic introduction to quantum error correction and fault‑tolerance, summarizing its core concepts without a detailed guide. Rather than presenting rigorous mathematical frameworks, the authors illustrate error correction and fault‑tolerance through detailed examples that are relevant to experimentalists today and in the near future.
Quantum error correction (QEC) and fault-tolerant quantum computation represent one of the most vital theoretical aspects of quantum information processing. It was well known from the early developments of this exciting field that the fragility of coherent quantum systems would be a catastrophic obstacle to the development of large-scale quantum computers. The introduction of quantum error correction in 1995 showed that active techniques could be employed to mitigate this fatal problem. However, quantum error correction and fault-tolerant computation is now a much larger field and many new codes, techniques, and methodologies have been developed to implement error correction for large-scale quantum algorithms. In response, we have attempted to summarize the basic aspects of quantum error correction and fault-tolerance, not as a detailed guide, but rather as a basic introduction. The development in this area has been so pronounced that many in the field of quantum information, specifically researchers who are new to quantum information or people focused on the many other important issues in quantum computation, have found it difficult to keep up with the general formalisms and methodologies employed in this area. Rather than introducing these concepts from a rigorous mathematical and computer science framework, we instead examine error correction and fault-tolerance largely through detailed examples, which are more relevant to experimentalists today and in the near future.
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