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This summary is machine-generated.

Quantum error correction typically assumes probabilistic noise. This study proves that stabilizer codes and syndrome measurements convert coherent errors into probabilistic Pauli errors, even without recovery.

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Area of Science:

  • Quantum Information Science
  • Quantum Computing
  • Quantum Error Correction

Background:

  • Quantum error correction research often simplifies noise models to probabilistic Pauli noise for analytical tractability.
  • The behavior of physically realistic coherent errors within quantum error correction codes remains less understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the effect of stabilizer codes and error syndrome measurements on coherent errors.
  • To demonstrate that these processes transform coherent errors into probabilistic Pauli errors.

Main Methods:

  • Theoretical analysis of quantum error correction codes, specifically stabilizer codes.
  • Mathematical proof demonstrating the decoherence of coherent errors through syndrome measurement.

Main Results:

  • Encoding in stabilizer codes and measuring error syndromes inherently decoheres coherent errors.
  • Coherent errors converge towards probabilistic Pauli errors, even without active error correction (recovery operations).
  • Logical error rates can be accurately quantified using average gate fidelity at the logical level.

Conclusions:

  • Syndrome measurement acts as a form of error mitigation by converting coherent errors to probabilistic ones.
  • This finding simplifies the analysis of logical error rates and facilitates the design of optimal recovery strategies.