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Quantum error correction techniques are methods to protect quantum information from errors due to decoherence and other noise.


Introduction

Classical error correction employs redundancy: The simplest way is to store the information multiple times, and—if these copies are later found to disagree—just take a majority vote; i.e. if, say, one copy says, the bit is a 0, and two others claim it to be a 1, then probably all three were a 1 and the first bit got corrupted.


However, this is not possible with quantum information, as it cannot be copied: see no-cloning theorem.


Therefore it was a relief when Peter Shor realized that, even if the information cannot be copied, the information of one qubit (now called a logical qubit) can be spread onto several (physical) qubits by using a quantum error correcting code. Now, if noise or decoherence corrupts one qubit, the information is not lost.


This is because a quantum error correcting code is designed such that a certain operation, called syndrome measurement can determine whether a qubit has been corrupted, and if so, which one. What is more, the outcome of this operation (the syndrome) tells us not only which physical qubit was affected, but also, in which of several possible ways it was affected.


The latter is counter-intuitive at first sight: Since noise is arbitrary, how can the effect of noise be one of only few distinct possibilities? In most codes, the effect is either a bit flip, or a sign (of the phase) flip, or both (corresponding to the Pauli matrices X, Z, and Y). The reason is that the measurement of the syndrome has the projective effect of a quantum measurement. So even if the error due to the noise was arbitrary, it can be expressed as a superposition of basis operations—the error basis (which is here given by the Pauli matrices and the identity).


So, the syndrome measurement "forces" the qubit to "decide" for a certain specific "Pauli error" to "have happened", and the syndrome tells us which, so that we can let the same Pauli operator act again on the corrupted qubit to revert the effect of the error.


The crucial point is that the syndrome measurement tells us as much as possible about the error that has happened, but nothing at all about the value that is stored in the logical qubit—as otherwise the measurement would destroy any quantum superposition of this logical qubit with other qubits in the quantum computer.


Over time, researchers have come up with several codes:

  • Peter Shor's 9-qubit-code, a.k.a. the Shor code, encodes 1 logical qubit in 9 physical qubits and can correct for one bit flip and one phase flip error.
  • Andrew Steane found a code which does the same with 7 instead of 9 qubits, see Steane code.
  • A generalisation of this concept are the CSS codes, named for their inventors: A. R. Calderbank, Peter Shor and Andrew Steane. A more general class of codes (encompassing the former) are the stabilizer codes of Daniel Gottesman.
  • A newer idea is Alexei Kitaev's topological quantum codes.

That these codes allow indeed for quantum computations of arbitrary length is the content of the threshold theorem, found by Michael Ben-Or and Dorit Aharonov, which asserts that you can correct for all errors if you concatenate quantum codes such as the CSS codes—i.e. re-encode each logical qubit by the same code again, and so on, on logarithmically many levels—provided the error rate of individual quantum gates is below a certain threshold; as otherwise, the attempts to measure the syndrome and correct the errors would introduce more new errors than they correct for.


Recent (as of late 2004) estimates for this threshold indicate that it could be as high as 1-3% [1] (http://www.arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0410199), provided that there are sufficiently many qubits available.


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QEC: Professional Education & Training - Seminar Programs (408 words)
QEC invites you to the following professional education seminars developed for health, welfare professionals and educators who work with parents and children 0-5 years.
Notify QEC Education Services at least 2 weeks prior to the session, that you wish to have a link.
QEC will require contact details of your video-conference location and will arrange a test link to the location a few days prior to the session.
Quicksilver Express Courier - Terms and Conditions (738 words)
QEC will entertain no claim of loss or damage to a shipment until all charges due QEC on account of such shipment have been paid.
If a shipment must be stored by QEC in excess of 24 hours, because it is undeliverable for reasons not the fault of QEC, it may be subject to a reasonable storage charge.
QEC reserves the right to reject a shipment after acceptance and prior to the performance of any transportation services, if such shipment would be likely to cause damage or delay to other shipments, equipment or personnel, or if the transportation of which is prohibited by law or violation of any rules contained in this agreement.
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