Quantum Brain
← Back to papers

Protecting quantum entanglement from leakage and qubit errors via repetitive parity measurements

C. C. Bultink, T. O’Brien, R. Vollmer, N. Muthusubramanian, M. Beekman, M. A. Rol, X. Fu, B. Tarasinski, V. Ostroukh, B. Varbanov, A. Bruno, L. DiCarlo·May 29, 2019·DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aay3050
Computer ScienceMedicineMathematicsPhysics

AI Breakdown

Get a structured breakdown of this paper — what it's about, the core idea, and key takeaways for the field.

Abstract

We protect two-transmon entanglement from qubit leakage using the same parity checks used to correct standard qubit errors. Protecting quantum information from errors is essential for large-scale quantum computation. Quantum error correction (QEC) encodes information in entangled states of many qubits and performs parity measurements to identify errors without destroying the encoded information. However, traditional QEC cannot handle leakage from the qubit computational space. Leakage affects leading experimental platforms, based on trapped ions and superconducting circuits, which use effective qubits within many-level physical systems. We investigate how two-transmon entangled states evolve under repeated parity measurements and demonstrate the use of hidden Markov models to detect leakage using only the record of parity measurement outcomes required for QEC. We show the stabilization of Bell states over up to 26 parity measurements by mitigating leakage using postselection and correcting qubit errors using Pauli-frame transformations. Our leakage identification method is computationally efficient and thus compatible with real-time leakage tracking and correction in larger quantum processors.

Related Research

Quantum Intelligence

Ask about quantum research, companies, or market developments.