Compare Papers
Paper 1
Magic state parity-checker with pre-distilled components
Earl T. Campbell, Mark Howard
- Year
- 2017
- Journal
- arXiv preprint
- DOI
- arXiv:1709.02214
- arXiv
- 1709.02214
Magic states are eigenstates of non-Pauli operators. One way of suppressing errors present in magic states is to perform parity measurements in their non-Pauli eigenbasis and postselect on even parity. Here we develop new protocols based on non-Pauli parity checking, where the measurements are implemented with the aid of pre-distilled multiqubit resource states. This leads to a two step process: pre-distillation of multiqubit resource states, followed by implementation of the parity check. These protocols can prepare single-qubit magic states that enable direct injection of single-qubit axial rotations without subsequent gate-synthesis and its associated overhead. We show our protocols are more efficient than all previous comparable protocols with quadratic error reduction, including the protocols of Bravyi and Haah.
Open paperPaper 2
Decoder Switching: Breaking the Speed-Accuracy Tradeoff in Real-Time Quantum Error Correction
Riki Toshio, Kaito Kishi, Jun Fujisaki, Hirotaka Oshima, Shintaro Sato, Keisuke Fujii
- Year
- 2025
- Journal
- arXiv preprint
- DOI
- arXiv:2510.25222
- arXiv
- 2510.25222
The realization of fault-tolerant quantum computers hinges on the construction of high-speed, high-accuracy, real-time decoding systems. The persistent challenge lies in the fundamental trade-off between speed and accuracy: efforts to improve the decoder's accuracy often lead to unacceptable increases in decoding time and hardware complexity, while attempts to accelerate decoding result in a significant degradation in logical error rate. To overcome this challenge, we propose a novel framework, decoder switching, which balances these competing demands by combining a faster, soft-output decoder ("weak decoder") with a slower, high-accuracy decoder ("strong decoder"). In usual rounds, the weak decoder processes error syndromes and simultaneously evaluates its reliability via soft information. Only when encountering a decoding window with low reliability do we switch to the strong decoder to achieve more accurate decoding. Numerical simulations suggest that this framework can achieve accuracy comparable to, or even surpassing, that of the strong decoder, while maintaining an average decoding time on par with the weak decoder. We also develop an online decoding scheme tailored to our framework, named double window decoding, and elucidate the criteria for preventing an exponential slowdown of quantum computation. These findings break the long-standing speed-accuracy trade-off, paving the way for scalable real-time decoding devices.
Open paper