Freely scalable quantum technologies using cells of 5-to-50 qubits with very lossy and noisy photonic links

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Abstract

Exquisite quantum control has now been achieved in small ion traps, in nitrogen-vacancy centers and in superconducting qubit clusters. We can regard such a system as a universal cell with diverse technological uses from communication to large-scale computing, provided that the cell is able to network with others and overcome any noise in the interlinks. Here, we show that loss-tolerant entanglement purification makes quantum computing feasible with the noisy and lossy links that are realistic today: With a modestly complex cell design, and using a surface code protocol with a network noise threshold of 13.3%, we find that interlinks that attempt entanglement at a rate of 2 MHz but suffer 98% photon loss can result in kilohertz computer clock speeds (i.e., rate of high-fidelity stabilizer measurements). Improved links would dramatically increase the clock speed. Our simulations employ local gates of a fidelity already achieved in ion trap devices.

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Nickerson, N. H., Fitzsimons, J. F., & Benjamin, S. C. (2014). Freely scalable quantum technologies using cells of 5-to-50 qubits with very lossy and noisy photonic links. Physical Review X, 4(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.4.041041

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