Architectural design for a topological cluster state quantum computer

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Abstract

The development of a large scale quantum computer is a highly sought after goal of fundamental research and consequently a highly nontrivial problem. Scalability in quantum information processing is not just a problem of qubit manufacturing and control but it crucially depends on the ability to adapt advanced techniques in quantum information theory, such as error correction, to the experimental restrictions of assembling qubit arrays into the millions. In this paper, we introduce a feasible architectural design for large scale quantum computation in optical systems. We combine the recent developments in topological cluster state computation with the photonic module, a simple chip-based device that can be used as a fundamental building block for a large-scale computer. The integration of the topological cluster model with this comparatively simple operational element addresses many significant issues in scalable computing and leads to a promising modular architecture with complete integration of active error correction, exhibiting high fault-tolerant thresholds. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.

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APA

Devitt, S. J., Fowler, A. G., Stephens, A. M., Greentree, A. D., Hollenberg, L. C. L., Munro, W. J., & Nemoto, K. (2009). Architectural design for a topological cluster state quantum computer. New Journal of Physics, 11. https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/11/8/083032

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