Bosonic Cyclic Codes: Trading Stabilizers for Gaussian Non-Clifford Phase Gates
Abstract
Bosonic codes offer hardware-efficient approaches to quantum error correction, with the best encodings offering effective protection of idle quantum information against loss and dephasing - particularly rotation-symmetric codes, which include the cat and binomial code families. However, rotation-symmetric codes are only naturally endowed with a single logical Pauli gate, while other logical gates require the use of non-linear operations, obstructing the utility of these codes for realizing quant...
Description / Details
Bosonic codes offer hardware-efficient approaches to quantum error correction, with the best encodings offering effective protection of idle quantum information against loss and dephasing - particularly rotation-symmetric codes, which include the cat and binomial code families. However, rotation-symmetric codes are only naturally endowed with a single logical Pauli gate, while other logical gates require the use of non-linear operations, obstructing the utility of these codes for realizing quantum algorithms. Here, we balance error protection with controllability by introducing bosonic cyclic codes: a generalization of rotation-symmetric codes that enable the measured tradeoff of error protection properties for fault-tolerant logical phase gates. Through our general construction, we find that sacrificing the detectability of a single photon loss relative to a rotation-symmetric code can yield a number of logical phase gates commensurate with the original rotation symmetry order of the code, all achievable via passive Gaussian rotations. Giving the corresponding generalizations of cat and binomial codes - which we dub cyclic cat and Vandermonde codes, respectively - we further find that many of the desirable properties of these codes transfer to the bosonic cyclic code setting. We go on to discuss the larger symmetry and rotation gates of the codes, which yield additional stabilizers and logical Pauli gates, as well as new non-Clifford gates for the smallest `kitten' binomial code, and provide a new error detection protocol. Finally, we introduce a general paradigm for converting higher-order stabilizers to logical gates, as in our generalization of rotation-symmetric codes, and apply it to several multimode bosonic codes.
Source: arXiv:2606.11010v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.11010v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2606.11010v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.11010v1
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Jun 10, 2026
Quantum Computing
Quantum Physics
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