Blueprint for a Scalable Photonic Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computer
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
We present Xanadu's proposal for a scalable and fault-tolerant photonic quantum computer. Central to our architecture are Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill bosonic qubits and squeezed states of light, stitched together into a qubit cluster state with one time and two spatial dimensions. This proposal for generating and manipulating a 3D resource state for fault-tolerant, measurement-based quantum computation combines state-of-the-art procedures for the preparation of bosonic qubits with the strengths of continuous-variable quantum computation performed using easy-to-generate squeezed states. Moreover, the architecture is based on modular, easy-to-network integrated photonic chips, opening the door to scalable fabrication and operation, which may in turn allow photonics to leap-frog other platforms on the path to a quantum computer with millions of qubits. In addition to overviewing the architecture from Xanadu's blueprint, we discuss subsequent work - including improvements to the stitching component - that significantly facilitate the creation of a useful quantum computer.
*For this work, J.E.B. was supported through an Ontario Graduate Scholarship, the Lachlan Gilchrist Fellowship, and by Mitacs through the Mitacs Accelerate program grant. I.T. was supported by an Ontario Graduate Scholarship and a Mitacs Accelerate program grant.
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Publication: 1. Bourassa, J. E. et al. Blueprint for a scalable photonic fault-tolerant quantum computer. Quantum 5, 1–38 (2021).
2. Tzitrin, I. et al. Fault-tolerant quantum computation with static linear optics, arXiv:2104.03241 [quant-ph] (2021).
Presenters
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Ilan Tzitrin
- Xanadu