English

Permutation-invariant quantum codes

Quantum Physics 2014-12-16 v5

Abstract

A quantum code is a subspace of a Hilbert space of a physical system chosen to be correctable against a given class of errors, where information can be encoded. Ideally, the quantum code lies within the ground space of the physical system. When the physical model is the Heisenberg ferromagnet in the absence of an external magnetic field, the corresponding ground-space contains all permutation-invariant states. We use techniques from combinatorics and operator theory to construct families of permutation-invariant quantum codes. These codes have length proportional to t2t^2; one family of codes perfectly corrects arbitrary weight tt errors, while the other family of codes approximately correct tt spontaneous decay errors. The analysis of our codes' performance with respect to spontaneous decay errors utilizes elementary matrix analysis, where we revisit and extend the quantum error correction criterion of Knill and Laflamme, and Leung, Chuang, Nielsen and Yamamoto.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1302.3247,
  title  = {Permutation-invariant quantum codes},
  author = {Yingkai Ouyang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1302.3247},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

Figures are still available in this version. Introduction is revised, elementary proofs removed, and paper is close to its final form

R2 v1 2026-06-21T23:25:46.964Z