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Zi-Han Chen, Ming-Cheng Chen, Chao-Yang Lu, Jian-Wei Pan (Mar 25 2025).
Abstract: Preparing high-fidelity logical magic states is crucial for fault-tolerant quantum computation. Among prior attempts to reduce the substantial cost of magic state preparation, magic state cultivation (MSC), a recently proposed protocol for preparing T\mathrm{T} states without magic state distillation, achieves state-of-the-art efficiency. Inspired by this work, we propose a new MSC procedure that would produce a logical T\mathrm{T} state on a rotated surface code at a further reduced cost. For our MSC protocol, we define a new code family, the RP2\mathbb {RP}^2 code, by putting the rotated surface code on RP2\mathbb{RP}^2 (a two-dimensional manifold), as well as two self-dual CSS codes named SRP-3 and SRP-5 respectively. Small RP2\mathbb{RP}^2 codes are used to hold logical information and checked by syndrome extraction (SE) circuits. We design fast morphing circuits that enable switching between a distance 3 (5) RP2\mathbb{RP}^2 code and an SRP-3 (SRP-5) code on which we can efficiently check the correctness of the logical state. To preserve the high accuracy of the cultivated logical T\mathrm{T} state, we design an efficient and easy-to-decode expansion stage that grows a small RP2\mathbb{RP}^2 code to a large rotated surface code in one round. Our MSC protocol utilizes non-local connectivity, available on both neutral atom array and ion trap platforms. According to our Monte Carlo sampling results, our MSC protocol requires about an order of magnitude smaller space-time volume to reach a target logical error rate around 10910^{-9} compared to the original MSC protocol.

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