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Phys. Rev. A 67, 052310 (2003) [11 pages]

Quantum error correction for continuously detected errors

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Charlene Ahn1,*, H. M. Wiseman2,†, and G. J. Milburn3,‡
1Institute for Quantum Information, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125
2Centre for Quantum Computer Technology, Centre for Quantum Dynamics, School of Science, Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland 4111, Australia
3Centre for Quantum Computer Technology, School of Physical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Queensland 4072, Australia

Received 6 February 2003; published 27 May 2003

We show that quantum feedback control can be used as a quantum-error-correction process for errors induced by a weak continuous measurement. In particular, when the error model is restricted to one, perfectly measured, error channel per physical qubit, quantum feedback can act to perfectly protect a stabilizer codespace. Using the stabilizer formalism we derive an explicit scheme, involving feedback and an additional constant Hamiltonian, to protect an (n-1)-qubit logical state encoded in n physical qubits. This works for both Poisson (jump) and white-noise (diffusion) measurement processes. Universal quantum computation is also possible in this scheme. As an example, we show that detected-spontaneous emission error correction with a driving Hamiltonian can greatly reduce the amount of redundancy required to protect a state from that which has been previously postulated [e.g., Alber et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 4402 (2001)].

© 2003 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.67.052310
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevA.67.052310
PACS:
03.67.Pp, 42.50.Lc, 03.65.Yz

*Electronic address: cahn@theory.caltech.edu

Electronic address: H.Wiseman@griffith.edu.au

Electronic address: Milburn@physics.uq.edu.au