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Topological Quantum Computing

Higher-group symmetry in finite gauge theory and stabilizer codes

arXiv
Authors: Maissam Barkeshli, Yu-An Chen, Po-Shen Hsin, Ryohei Kobayashi

Year

2022

Paper ID

6630

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

221

Citations

N/A

Abstract

A large class of gapped phases of matter can be described by topological finite group gauge theories. In this paper we show how such gauge theories possess a higher-group global symmetry, which we study in detail. We derive the d-group global symmetry and its 't Hooft anomaly for topological finite group gauge theories in (d+1) space-time dimensions, including non-Abelian gauge groups and Dijkgraaf-Witten twists. We focus on the 1-form symmetry generated by invertible (Abelian) magnetic defects and the higher-form symmetries generated by invertible topological defects decorated with lower dimensional gauged symmetry-protected topological (SPT) phases. We show that due to a generalization of the Witten effect and charge-flux attachment, the 1-form symmetry generated by the magnetic defects mixes with other symmetries into a higher group. We describe such higher-group symmetry in various lattice model examples. We discuss several applications, including the classification of fermionic SPT phases in (3+1)D for general fermionic symmetry groups, where we also derive a simpler formula for the \[O5\] in H5(BG, U(1)) obstruction that has appeared in prior work. We also show how the d-group symmetry is related to fault-tolerant non-Pauli logical gates and a refined Clifford hierarchy in stabilizer codes. We discover new logical gates in stabilizer codes using the d-group symmetry, such as a Controlled-Z gate in (3+1)D mathbb{Z}2 toric code.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Topological Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2022 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • A large class of gapped phases of matter can be described by topological finite group gauge theories.

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