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Source code and data underlying the publication "Fault-tolerant modular quantum computing with surface codes using single-shot emission-based hardware"

  • D. Elkouss Coronas (Creator)
  • S. Singh (Creator)
  •  Rikiya Kashiwagi (Creator)
  • Kazufumi Tanji (Creator)
  • Wojciech Roga (Creator)
  • Daniel Bhatti (Creator)
  • Masahiro Takeoka (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Fault-tolerant modular quantum computing requires stabilizer measurements across the modules in a quantum network. For this, entangled states of high quality and rate must be distributed. Currently, two main types of entanglement distribution protocols exist, namely emission-based and scattering-based, each with its own advantages and drawbacks. On the one hand, scattering-based protocols with cavities or waveguides are fast but demand stringent hardware such as high-efficiency integrated circulators or strong waveguide coupling. On the other hand, emission-based platforms are experimentally feasible but so far rely on Bell-pair fusion with extensive use of slow two-qubit memory gates, limiting thresholds to ~0.16%. Here, we consider a fully distributed surface code using emission-based entanglement schemes that generate GHZ states in a single shot, i.e., without the need for Bell-pair fusions. We show that our optical setup produces Bell pairs, W states, and GHZ states, enabling both memory-based and optical protocols for distilling high-fidelity GHZ states with significantly improved success rates. Furthermore, we introduce protocols that completely eliminate the need for memory-based two-qubit gates, achieving thresholds of ~0.19% with modest hardware enhancements, increasing to above ~0.24% with photon-number-resolving detectors. These results show the feasibility of emission-based architectures for scalable fault-tolerant operation.
Date made available1 Dec 2025
PublisherTU Delft - 4TU.ResearchData

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