Quantum error correction beyond qubits

Quantum error correction beyond qubits

Aoki, T., Takahash, G., Kajiya, T., Yoshikawa, J., Braunstein, S.L., van Loock, P. and Furusawa, A.
(2009): Nature Physics 5, 541-546 (PDF) Supplementary Material

ABSTRACT: Quantum computation and communication rely on the ability to manipulate quantum states robustly and with high fidelity. To protect fragile quantum-superposition states from corruption through so-called decoherence noise, some form of error correction is needed. Therefore, the discovery of quantum error correction (QEC) was a key step to turn the field of quantum information from an academic curiosity into a developing technology. Here, we present an experimental implementation of a QEC code for quantum information encoded in continuous variables, based on entanglement among nine optical beams. This nine-wave-packet adaptation of Shor’s original nine-qubit scheme enables, at least in principle, full quantum error correction against an arbitrary single-beam error.