Quantum codes – from experimental realizations to quantum foundations
APA
Raussendorf, R. (2014). Quantum codes – from experimental realizations to quantum foundations. Perimeter Institute. https://pirsa.org/14070008
MLA
Raussendorf, Robert. Quantum codes – from experimental realizations to quantum foundations. Perimeter Institute, Jul. 15, 2014, https://pirsa.org/14070008
BibTex
@misc{ pirsa_PIRSA:14070008, doi = {10.48660/14070008}, url = {https://pirsa.org/14070008}, author = {Raussendorf, Robert}, keywords = {}, language = {en}, title = {Quantum codes {\textendash} from experimental realizations to quantum foundations}, publisher = {Perimeter Institute}, year = {2014}, month = {jul}, note = {PIRSA:14070008 see, \url{https://pirsa.org}} }
University of British Columbia
Collection
Talk Type
Abstract
This talk is divided into two parts. In the first part, I discuss a scheme of fault-tolerant quantum computation for a web-like physical architecture of a quantum computer. Small logical units of a few qubits (realized in ion traps, for example) are linked via a photonic interconnect which provides probabilistic heralded Bell pairs [1]. Two time scales compete in this system, namely the characteristic decoherence time T_D and the typical time T_E it takes to provide a Bell pair. We show that, perhaps unexpectedly, this system can be used for fault-tolerant quantum computation for all values of the ratio T_D/T_E.
The second part of my talk is about something entirely different, namely the role of contextuality in quantum computation by magic state distillation. Recently, Howard et al. [2] have shown that contextuality is a necessary resource for such computation on qudits of odd prime dimension. Here we provide an analogous result for 2-level systems.
However, we require them to be rebits. [joint work with Jake Bian, Philippe Guerin and Nicolas Delfosse]
[1] C. Monroe, R. Raussendorf, A. Ruthven, K. R. Brown, P. Maunz4, L.-M.
Duan, and J. Kim, , Phys Rev A 89, 22317 (2014).
[2] Mark Howard, Joel Wallman, Victor Veitch & Joseph Emerson, Nature
doi:10.1038/nature13460 (2014).
The second part of my talk is about something entirely different, namely the role of contextuality in quantum computation by magic state distillation. Recently, Howard et al. [2] have shown that contextuality is a necessary resource for such computation on qudits of odd prime dimension. Here we provide an analogous result for 2-level systems.
However, we require them to be rebits. [joint work with Jake Bian, Philippe Guerin and Nicolas Delfosse]
[1] C. Monroe, R. Raussendorf, A. Ruthven, K. R. Brown, P. Maunz4, L.-M.
Duan, and J. Kim, , Phys Rev A 89, 22317 (2014).
[2] Mark Howard, Joel Wallman, Victor Veitch & Joseph Emerson, Nature
doi:10.1038/nature13460 (2014).