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      Universal logical gates with constant overhead: instantaneous Dehn twists for hyperbolic quantum codes

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          Abstract

          A basic question in the theory of fault-tolerant quantum computation is to understand the fundamental resource costs for performing a universal logical set of gates on encoded qubits to arbitrary accuracy. Here we consider qubits encoded with constant space overhead (i.e. finite encoding rate) in the limit of arbitrarily large code distance \(d\) through the use of topological codes associated to triangulations of hyperbolic surfaces. We introduce explicit protocols to demonstrate how Dehn twists of the hyperbolic surface can be implemented on the code through constant depth unitary circuits, without increasing the space overhead. The circuit for a given Dehn twist consists of a permutation of physical qubits, followed by a constant depth local unitary circuit, where locality here is defined with respect to a hyperbolic metric that defines the code. Applying our results to the hyperbolic Fibonacci Turaev-Viro code implies the possibility of applying universal logical gate sets on encoded qubits through constant depth unitary circuits and with constant space overhead. Our circuits are inherently protected from errors as they map local operators to local operators while changing the size of their support by at most a constant factor; in the presence of noisy syndrome measurements, our results suggest the possibility of universal fault tolerant quantum computation with constant space overhead and time overhead of \(\mathcal{O}(d/\log d)\). For quantum circuits that allow parallel gate operations, this yields the optimal scaling of space-time overhead known to date.

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          Good Quantum Error-Correcting Codes Exist

          , (2009)
          A quantum error-correcting code is defined to be a unitary mapping (encoding) of k qubits (2-state quantum systems) into a subspace of the quantum state space of n qubits such that if any t of the qubits undergo arbitrary decoherence, not necessarily independently, the resulting n qubits can be used to faithfully reconstruct the original quantum state of the k encoded qubits. Quantum error-correcting codes are shown to exist with asymptotic rate k/n = 1 - 2H(2t/n) where H(p) is the binary entropy function -p log p - (1-p) log (1-p). Upper bounds on this asymptotic rate are given.
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            Universal Quantum Computation with ideal Clifford gates and noisy ancillas

            We consider a model of quantum computation in which the set of elementary operations is limited to Clifford unitaries, the creation of the state \(|0\rangle\) computational basis. In addition, we allow the creation of a one-qubit ancilla in a mixed state \(\rho\), which should be regarded as a parameter of the model. Our goal is to determine for which \(\rho\) universal quantum computation (UQC) can be efficiently simulated. To answer this question, we construct purification protocols that consume several copies of \(\rho\) and produce a single output qubit with higher polarization. The protocols allow one to increase the polarization only along certain "magic" directions. If the polarization of \(\rho\) along a magic direction exceeds a threshold value (about 65%), the purification asymptotically yields a pure state, which we call a magic state. We show that the Clifford group operations combined with magic states preparation are sufficient for UQC. The connection of our results with the Gottesman-Knill theorem is discussed.
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              String-net condensation: A physical mechanism for topological phases

              We show that quantum systems of extended objects naturally give rise to a large class of exotic phases - namely topological phases. These phases occur when the extended objects, called ``string-nets'', become highly fluctuating and condense. We derive exactly soluble Hamiltonians for 2D local bosonic models whose ground states are string-net condensed states. Those ground states correspond to 2D parity invariant topological phases. These models reveal the mathematical framework underlying topological phases: tensor category theory. One of the Hamiltonians - a spin-1/2 system on the honeycomb lattice - is a simple theoretical realization of a fault tolerant quantum computer. The higher dimensional case also yields an interesting result: we find that 3D string-net condensation naturally gives rise to both emergent gauge bosons and emergent fermions. Thus, string-net condensation provides a mechanism for unifying gauge bosons and fermions in 3 and higher dimensions.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                30 January 2019
                Article
                1901.11029
                0803c53a-02c5-4363-a153-452cf5fdf046

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                12.5 pages + Appendices, 12 figures
                quant-ph cond-mat.str-el hep-th math-ph math.GT math.MP

                Mathematical physics,Condensed matter,Quantum physics & Field theory,High energy & Particle physics,Mathematical & Computational physics,Geometry & Topology

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