English

Self-correcting quantum memory with a boundary

Quantum Physics 2013-05-30 v3 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics

Abstract

We study the two-dimensional toric code Hamiltonian with effective long-range interactions between its anyonic excitations induced by coupling the toric code to external fields. It has been shown that such interactions allow to increase the lifetime of the stored quantum information arbitrarily by making LL, the linear size of the memory, larger [Phys. Rev. A 82 022305 (2010)]. We show that for these systems the choice of boundary conditions (open boundaries as opposed to periodic boundary conditions) is not a mere technicality; the influence of anyons produced at the boundaries becomes in fact dominant for large enough LL. This influence can be both beneficial or detrimental. In particular, we study an effective Hamiltonian proposed in [Phys. Rev. B 83 115415 (2011)] that describes repulsion between anyons and anyon holes. For this system, we find a lifetime of the stored quantum information that grows exponentially in L2L^2 for both periodic and open boundary conditions, though the exponent in the latter case is found to be less favourable. However, LL is upper-bounded through the breakdown of the perturbative treatment of the underlying Hamiltonian.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1206.0991,
  title  = {Self-correcting quantum memory with a boundary},
  author = {Adrian Hutter and James R. Wootton and Beat Röthlisberger and Daniel Loss},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1206.0991},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

14+2 pages, 10 figures, revtex; v2: author added; v3: minor improvements, to appear in Phys. Rev. A

R2 v1 2026-06-21T21:14:36.400Z