Phys. Rev. A 67, 052310 (2003) [11 pages]Quantum error correction for continuously detected errorsReceived 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
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