7
talks
1
committee roles
0
leadership roles
2020–2026
years active
Contributions
QIP QCrypt TQC presenter award · △program ◇steering ○organising □local · filled = chair
Talks
| Title | Conference | Type | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Layer codes as partially self-correcting quantum memories | QIP 2026 | regular | Shouzhen Gu, Libor Caha, Shin Ho Choe, Zhiyang He, Aleksander Kubica |
We investigate layer codes, a family of three-dimensional stabilizer codes that can achieve optimal scaling of code parameters and a polynomial energy barrier, as candidates for self-correcting quantum memories. First, we introduce two decoding algorithms for layer codes with provable guarantees for local stochastic and adversarial noise, respectively. We then prove that layer codes are partially self-correcting quantum memories. With memory times scaling exponentially in the linear size of the system, layer codes outperform the previously demonstrated subexponential scaling of the welded solid code. Notably, we argue that partial self-correction without the requirement of efficient decoding is more common than expected, as it arises from a diverging energy barrier. This draws a sharp distinction between partially self-correcting systems, and partially self-correcting memories. Another novel aspect of our work is an analysis of layer codes constructed from random Calderbank–Shor–Steane codes. We show that these random layer codes have optimal scaling (up to logarithmic corrections) of code parameters and a polynomial energy barrier. Finally, we present numerical studies of their memory times and report behavior consistent with partial self-correction. |
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| Locality and Parameter Tradeoffs for Subsystem Codes | TQC 2025 | regular | Samuel Dai, Ray Li |
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Single-shot decoding of good quantum LDPC codes ↗
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TQC 2024 | regular | ▸Shouzhen Gu, Libor Caha, Shin Ho Choe, Zhiyang He, Aleksander Kubica |
Quantum Tanner codes constitute a family of quantum low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes with good parameters, i.e., constant encoding rate and relative distance. In this article, we prove that quantum Tanner codes also facilitate single-shot quantum error correction (QEC) of adversarial noise, where one measurement round (consisting of constant-weight parity checks) suffices to perform reliable QEC even in the presence of measurement errors. We establish this result for both the sequential and parallel decoding algorithms introduced by Leverrier and Zemor. Furthermore, we show that in order to suppress errors over multiple repeated rounds of QEC, it suffices to run the parallel decoding algorithm for constant time in each round. Combined with good code parameters, the resulting constant-time overhead of QEC and robustness to (possibly time-correlated) adversarial noise make quantum Tanner codes alluring from the perspective of quantum fault-tolerant protocols. |
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| An efficient decoder for a linear distance quantum LDPC code | QIP 2023 | regular | ▸Shouzhen Gu, Christopher Pattison |
| The ghost in the radiation: Robust encodings of the black hole interior | QIP 2021 | regular | Isaac Kim, John Preskill |
Abstract We reconsider the black hole firewall puzzle, emphasizing that quantum error-correction, computational complexity, and pseudorandomness are crucial concepts for understanding the black hole interior. We assume that the Hawking radiation emitted by an old black hole is pseudorandom, meaning that it cannot be distinguished from a perfectly thermal state by any efficient quantum computation acting on the radiation alone. We then infer the existence of a subspace of the radiation system which we interpret as an encoding of the black hole interior. This encoded interior is entangled with the late outgoing Hawking quanta emitted by the old black hole, and is inaccessible to computationally bounded observers who are outside the black hole. Specifically, efficient operations acting on the radiation, those with quantum computational complexity polynomial in the entropy of the remaining black hole, commute with a complete set of logical operators acting on the encoded interior, up to corrections which are exponentially small in the entropy. Thus, under our pseudorandomness assumption, the black hole interior is well protected from exterior observers as long as the remaining black hole is macroscopic. On the other hand, if the radiation is not pseudorandom, an exterior observer may be able to create a firewall by applying a polynomial-time quantum computation to the radiation. |
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| Hybrid quantum-classical algorithms for approximate graph coloring | TQC 2021 | regular | Sergey Bravyi, Alexander Kliesch, Robert Koenig |
| Obstacles to State Preparation and Variational Optimization from Symmetry Protection | QIP 2020 | regular | Sergey Bravyi, Robert Koenig, Alexander Kliesch |
Committee service
| Conference | Committee | Position | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| QIP 2025 | PC | member | — |
Collaborators
| Co-author | Joint talks |
|---|---|
| Shouzhen Gu | 3 |
| Aleksander Kubica | 2 |
| Alexander Kliesch | 2 |
| Libor Caha | 2 |
| Robert Koenig | 2 |
| Sergey Bravyi | 2 |
| Shin Ho Choe | 2 |
| Zhiyang He | 2 |
| Christopher Pattison | 1 |
| Isaac Kim | 1 |
| John Preskill | 1 |
| Ray Li | 1 |
| Samuel Dai | 1 |