Posted

Shival Dasu, Simon Burton, Karl Mayer, David Amaro, Justin A. Gerber, Kevin Gilmore, Dan Gresh, Davide DelVento, Andrew C. Potter, David Hayes (Jun 18 2025).
Abstract: Encoding quantum information to protect it from errors is essential for performing large-scale quantum computations. Performing a universal set of quantum gates on encoded states demands a potentially large resource overhead and minimizing this overhead is key for the practical development of large-scale fault-tolerant quantum computers. We propose and experimentally implement a magic-state preparation protocol to fault-tolerantly prepare a pair of logical magic states in a [[6,2,2]] quantum error-detecting code using only eight physical qubits. Implementing this protocol on H1-1, a 20 qubit trapped-ion quantum processor, we prepare magic states with experimental infidelity 7−1+3×10−57^{+3}_{-1}\times 10^{-5} with a 14.8−1+1%14.8^{+1}_{-1}\% discard rate and use these to perform a fault-tolerant non-Clifford gate, the controlled-Hadamard (CH), with logical infidelity ≤2.3−9+9×10−4\leq 2.3^{+9}_{-9}\times 10^{-4}. Notably, this significantly outperforms the unencoded physical CH infidelity of 10−310^{-3}. Through circuit-level stabilizer simulations, we show that this protocol can be self-concatenated to produce extremely high-fidelity magic states with low space-time overhead in a [[36,4,4]] quantum error correcting code, with logical error rates of 6×10−106\times 10^{-10} (5×10−145\times 10^{-14}) at two-qubit error rate of 10−310^{-3} (10−410^{-4}) respectively.

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