Posted

Yue Wu, Namitha Liyanage, Lin Zhong (Feb 21 2025).
Abstract: Minimum-Weight Perfect Matching (MWPM) decoding is important to quantum error correction decoding because of its accuracy. However, many believe that it is difficult, if possible at all, to achieve the microsecond latency requirement posed by superconducting qubits. This work presents the first publicly known MWPM decoder, called Micro Blossom, that achieves sub-microsecond decoding latency. Micro Blossom employs a heterogeneous architecture that carefully partitions a state-of-the-art MWPM decoder between software and a programmable accelerator with parallel processing units, one of each vertex/edge of the decoding graph. On a surface code with code distance dd and a circuit-level noise model with physical error rate pp, Micro Blossom's accelerator employs O(d3)O(d^3) parallel processing units to reduce the worst-case latency from O(d12)O(d^{12}) to O(d9)O(d^9) and reduce the average latency from O(pd3+1)O(p d^3+1) to O(p2d2+1)O(p^2 d^2+1) when p1p \ll 1. We report a prototype implementation of Micro Blossom using FPGA. Measured at d=13d=13 and p=0.1%p=0.1\%, the prototype achieves an average decoding latency of 0.8μs0.8 \mu s at a moderate clock frequency of 62MHz62 MHz. Micro Blossom is the first publicly known hardware-accelerated exact MWPM decoder, and the decoding latency of 0.8μs0.8 \mu s is 8 times shorter than the best latency of MWPM decoder implementations reported in the literature.

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