hardware error_correction simulation policy

STAR-Magic Mutation: Even More Efficient Analog Rotation Gates for Early Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computer

Curator's Take

This research tackles one of the most pressing challenges in early fault-tolerant quantum computing: efficiently implementing rotation gates, which are essential for many quantum algorithms but notoriously expensive in error-corrected systems. The STAR-magic mutation protocol achieves a remarkable improvement in error scaling, reducing execution time and error rates by two orders of magnitude for small-angle rotations compared to standard approaches using magic state distillation. This breakthrough is particularly significant for quantum simulation algorithms that rely on Trotter decomposition, where sequences of many small rotation gates are required, potentially making previously impractical simulations feasible on near-term fault-tolerant devices. The work also introduces a novel quantum architecture that cleverly combines different gate synthesis approaches, suggesting we may be closer to practical quantum advantage in simulation tasks than previously thought.

— Mark Eatherly

Summary

We introduce STAR-magic mutation, an efficient protocol for implementing logical rotation gates on early fault-tolerant quantum computers. This protocol judiciously combines two of the latest state preparation protocols: transversal multi-rotation protocol and magic state cultivation. It achieves a logical rotation gate with a favorable error scaling of $\mathcal{O}(θ_L^{2(1-Θ(1/d))}p_{\text{ph}})$, while requiring only the ancillary space of a single surface code patch. Here, $θ_L$ is the logical rotation angle, $p_{\text{ph}}$ is the physical error rate, and $d$ is the code distance. This scaling marks a significant improvement over the previous state-of-the-art, $\mathcal{O}(θ_L p_{\text{ph}})$, making our protocol particularly powerful for implementing a sequence of small-angle rotation gates, like Trotter-based circuits. Notably, for $θ_L \lesssim 10^{-5}$, our protocol achieves a two-order-of-magnitude reduction in both the execution time and the error rate of analog rotation gates compared to the standard $T$-gate synthesis using cultivated magic states. Building upon this protocol, we also propose a novel quantum computing architecture designed for early fault-tolerant quantum computers, dubbed ``STAR ver.~3". It employs a refined circuit compilation strategy based on Clifford+$T$+$φ$ gate set, rather than the conventional Clifford+$T$ or Clifford+$φ$ gate sets. We establish a theoretical bound on the feasible circuit size on this architecture and illustrate its capabilities by analyzing the spacetime costs for simulating the dynamics of quantum many-body systems. Specifically, we demonstrate that our architecture can simulate biologically-relevant molecules or lattice models at scales beyond the reach of exact classical simulation, with only a few hundred thousand physical qubits, even assuming a realistic error rate of $p_{\text{ph}}=10^{-3}$.