Quantum error correction with dissipatively stabilized squeezed-cat qubits
Journal article, 2023

Noise-biased qubits are a promising route toward significantly reducing the hardware overhead associated with quantum error correction. The squeezed-cat code, a nonlocal encoding in phase space based on squeezed coherent states, is an example of a noise-biased (bosonic) qubit with exponential error bias. Here we propose and analyze the error correction performance of a dissipatively stabilized squeezed-cat qubit. We find that for moderate squeezing the bit-flip error rate gets significantly reduced in comparison with the ordinary cat qubit while leaving the phase-flip rate unchanged. Additionally, we find that the squeezing enables faster and higher-fidelity gates.

Author

Timo Hillmann

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Applied Quantum Physics

Isaac Fernando Quijandria Diaz

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University

Physical Review A

24699926 (ISSN) 24699934 (eISSN)

Vol. 107 3 032423

Subject Categories

Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

Other Physics Topics

DOI

10.1103/PhysRevA.107.032423

More information

Latest update

1/3/2024 9