Astrea: Accurate Quantum Error-Decoding via Practical Minimum-Weight Perfect-Matching

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Abstract

Quantum devices suffer from high error rates, which makes them ineffective for running practical applications. Quantum computers can be made fault tolerant using Quantum Error Correction (QEC), which protects quantum information by encoding logical qubits using data qubits and parity qubits. The data qubits collectively store the quantum information and the parity qubits are measured periodically to produce a syndrome, which is decoded by a classical decoder to identify the location and type of errors. To prevent errors from accumulating and causing a logical error, decoders must accurately identify errors in real-time, necessitating the use of hardware solutions because software decoders are slow. Ideally, a real-time decoder must match the performance of the Minimum-Weight Perfect Matching (MWPM) decoder. However, due to the complexity of the underlying Blossom algorithm, state-of-the-art real-time decoders either use lookup tables, which are not scalable, or use approximate decoding, which significantly increases logical error rates.

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Vittal, S., Das, P., & Qureshi, M. (2023). Astrea: Accurate Quantum Error-Decoding via Practical Minimum-Weight Perfect-Matching. In Proceedings - International Symposium on Computer Architecture (pp. 17–32). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3579371.3589037

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