Fault-tolerant embedding of quantum circuits on hardware architectures via swap gates
In near-term quantum computing devices, connectivity between qubits remain limited by architectural constraints. A computational circuit with given connectivity requirements necessary for multi-qubit gates have to be embedded within physical hardware with fixed connectivity. Long-distance gates have...
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Zusammenfassung: | In near-term quantum computing devices, connectivity between qubits remain
limited by architectural constraints. A computational circuit with given
connectivity requirements necessary for multi-qubit gates have to be embedded
within physical hardware with fixed connectivity. Long-distance gates have to
be done by first routing the relevant qubits together. The simplest routing
strategy involves the use of swap gates to swap the information carried by two
unconnected qubits to connected ones. Ideal swap gates just permute the qubits;
real swap gates, however, have the added possibilities of causing simultaneous
errors on the qubits involved and spreading errors across the circuit. A
general swap scheme thus changes the error-propagation properties of a circuit,
including those necessary for fault-tolerant functioning of a circuit. Here, we
present a simple strategy to design the swap scheme needed to embed an abstract
circuit onto a physical hardware with constrained connectivity, in a manner
that preserves the fault-tolerant properties of the abstract circuit. The
embedded circuit will, of course, be noisier, compared to a native
implementation of the abstract circuit, but we show in the examples of
embedding surface codes on heavy-hexagonal and hexagonal lattices that the
deterioration is not severe. This then offers a straightforward solution to
implementing circuits with fault-tolerance properties on current hardware. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2406.17044 |