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Quantifying nonlocality: how outperforming local quantum codes is expensive (2109.10982v1)

Published 22 Sep 2021 in quant-ph, cs.IT, and math.IT

Abstract: Quantum low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes are a promising avenue to reduce the cost of constructing scalable quantum circuits. However, it is unclear how to implement these codes in practice. Seminal results of Bravyi & Terhal, and Bravyi, Poulin & Terhal have shown that quantum LDPC codes implemented through local interactions obey restrictions on their dimension $k$ and distance $d$. Here we address the complementary question of how many long-range interactions are required to implement a quantum LDPC code with parameters $k$ and $d$. In particular, in 2D we show that a quantum LDPC with distance $n{1/2 + \epsilon}$ code requires $\Omega(n{1/2 + \epsilon})$ interactions of length $\widetilde{\Omega}(n{\epsilon})$. Further a code satisfying $k \propto n$ with distance $d \propto n\alpha$ requires $\widetilde{\Omega}(n)$ interactions of length $\widetilde{\Omega}(n{\alpha/2})$. Our results are derived using bounds on quantum codes from graph metrics. As an application of these results, we consider a model called a stacked architecture, which has previously been considered as a potential way to implement quantum LDPC codes. In this model, although most interactions are local, a few of them are allowed to be very long. We prove that limited long-range connectivity implies quantitative bounds on the distance and code dimension.

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