English

Scalable accuracy gains from postselection in quantum error correcting codes

Statistical Mechanics 2026-05-20 v3 Quantum Physics

Abstract

Decoding stabilizer codes such as the surface and toric codes involves evaluating free-energy differences in a disordered statistical mechanics model, in which the randomness comes from the observed pattern of error syndromes. We study the statistical distribution of logical failure rates across observed syndromes in the toric code, and show that, within the coding phase, logical failures are predominantly caused by exponentially unlikely syndromes. Therefore, postselecting on not seeing these exponentially unlikely syndrome patterns offers a scalable accuracy gain. In general, the logical error rate can be suppressed from pfp_f to pfbp_f^b, where b2b \geq 2 in general; in the specific case of the toric code with perfect syndrome measurements, we find numerically that b=3.1(1)b = 3.1(1). Our arguments apply to general topological stabilizer codes, and can be extended to more general settings as long as the decoding failure probability obeys a large deviation principle.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2510.05222,
  title  = {Scalable accuracy gains from postselection in quantum error correcting codes},
  author = {Hongkun Chen and Daohong Xu and Grace M. Sommers and David A. Huse and Jeff D. Thompson and Sarang Gopalakrishnan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2510.05222},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

18 pages, 11 figures

R2 v1 2026-07-01T06:19:53.421Z