English

The Persistent Quantum Bit

Quantum Physics 2008-02-03 v2

Abstract

The construction of large, coherent quantum systems necessary for quantum computation remains an entreating but elusive goal, due to the ubiquitous nature of decoherence. Recent progress in quantum error correction schemes have given new hope to this field, but thus far, the codes presented in the literature assume a restricted number of errors and error free encoding, decoding, and measurement. We investigate a specific scenario without these assumptions; in particular, we evaluate a scheme to preserve a single quantum bit against phase damping using a three-qubit encoding based on Shor. By applying a new formalism which gives simple operators for decoherence and noisy logic gates, we find the fidelity of the stored qubit as a function of time, including decoherence which occurs not only during storage but also during processing. We generalize our results to include any source of error, and derive an upper limit on the allowable decoherence per timestep. Physically, our results suggest the feasibility of engineering artificial metastable states through repeated error correction.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.quant-ph/9604030,
  title  = {The Persistent Quantum Bit},
  author = {Isaac L. Chuang and Yoshihisa Yamamoto},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/9604030},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

15 pages, postscript only, figures also available at http://feynman.stanford.edu/qcomp/