Evan Sutcliffe, Bhargavi Jonnadula, Claire Le Gall, Alexandra E. Moylett, Coral M. Westoby (Jan 27 2025).
Abstract: Quantum computing offers significant speedups, but the large number of physical qubits required for quantum error correction introduces engineering challenges for a monolithic architecture. One solution is to distribute the logical quantum computation across multiple small quantum computers, with non-local operations enabled via distributed Bell states. Previous investigations of distributed quantum error correction have largely focused on the surface code, which offers good error suppression but poor encoding rates, with each surface code instance only able to encode a single logical qubit. In this work, we argue that hyperbolic Floquet codes are particularly well-suited to distributed quantum error correction for two reasons. Firstly, their hyperbolic structure enables a high number of logical qubits to be stored efficiently. Secondly, the fact that all measurements are between pairs of qubits means that each measurement only requires a single Bell state. Through simulations, we show that distributed hyperbolic Floquet codes offer good performance under local and non-local phenomenological noise. This shows that distributed quantum error correction is not only possible but efficiently realisable.