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Fault-tolerant quantum computing
Quantum states can be delicate. Attempts to process and manipulate quantum states can destroy the encoded information. Nigg et al. encoded the quantum state of a single qubit (in this case, a trapped ion) over the global properties of a series of trapped ions. These so-called stabilizers protected the information against noise sources that can degrade the single qubit. The protocol provides a route to fault-tolerant quantum computing.
Science, this issue p. 302
Abstract
The construction of a quantum computer remains a fundamental scientific and technological challenge because of the influence of unavoidable noise. Quantum states and operations can be protected from errors through the use of protocols for quantum computing with faulty components. We present a quantum error-correcting code in which one qubit is encoded in entangled states distributed over seven trapped-ion qubits. The code can detect one bit flip error, one phase flip error, or a combined error of both, regardless on which of the qubits they occur. We applied sequences of gate operations on the encoded qubit to explore its computational capabilities. This seven-qubit code represents a fully functional instance of a topologically encoded qubit, or color code, and opens a route toward fault-tolerant quantum computing.