| Literature DB >> 25425400 |
Zhuo Wang1,2, Sixia Yu2,3, Heng Fan1, C H Oh2.
Abstract
Pre-shared non-local entanglement dramatically simplifies and improves the performance of quantum error correction via entanglement-assisted quantum error-correcting codes (EAQECCs). However, even considering the noise in quantum communication only, the non-local sharing of a perfectly entangled pair is technically impossible unless additional resources are consumed, such as entanglement distillation, which actually compromises the efficiency of the codes. Here we propose an error-correcting protocol assisted by two-way noisy communication that is more easily realisable: all quantum communication is subjected to general noise and all entanglement is created locally without additional resources consumed. In our protocol the pre-shared noisy entangled pairs are purified simultaneously by the decoding process. For demonstration, we first present an easier implementation of the well-known EAQECC [[4, 1, 3; 1]]. Then, we construct for the first time a 1-error-correcting code of 4 physical qudits capable of encoding 1 qubit of information, which is impossible in standard quantum error correction, demonstrating that our protocol can also improve the encoding rate in some sense. A systematic construction of two-way-noisy-communication-assisted codes is also provided.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25425400 PMCID: PMC4244632 DOI: 10.1038/srep07203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1A comparison of (a). the EAQECC protocol [[4, 1, 3; 1]] and (b). our 2WNC-assisted QECC protocol .
Bob's part and Alice's part are horizontally separated by a grey line, and the flow of time is from left to right. The dotted lines represent noisy quantum channels. A pair of grey circles represents two qudits in a maximally entangled states that are pre-shared non-locally by Alice and Bob, and a grey ellipse represents a qudit composed of two subsystems in a maximally entangled state.
The stabilizer of the 2WNC-assisted QECC . Qudits 1, 2, 3, and 4 belong to Alice, and qudit 0 belongs to Bob. Because there are eight generators of the stabilizers, any error exhibits an 8-bit syndrome, a binary vector with entries 0 and 1 denoting whether the error is commuting or anticommuting with the corresponding generators. For each 4-level qudit, the left-hand column, the right-hand column and the sum of the two columns represent the syndromes of the errors on the first qubit, second quibit and both qubits, respectively, all of which collectively form the error syndromes of the coresponding 4-level qudit. For example, the syndrome of a single-qudit error on qudit 2 is
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Figure 2The encoding circuits of the 2WNC-assisted QECCs (a). and (b). .
A boxed H represents a Hadamard gate, a pair of connected black dots represents the controlled-phase gate U, a pair of connected black (source) and white (target) dots represents a controlled-NOT gate U, and . The dotted lines represent noisy quantum channels.
The stabilizer of the 2WNC-assisted QECC . Qudits 2 and 3 belong to Alice, and qudits 0 and 1 belong to Bob. For each of the qudits 0 and 1, the second qubit is the flying qubit. The existence of seven generators for the stabilizer means that one logical qubit is encoded
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
|---|---|---|---|