Submitted:
29 October 2024
Posted:
30 October 2024
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
1.1. Quantum States
1.1.1. Pure states
1.1.2. Mixed states
1.2. Coherence and decoherence
2. Stereographic projection of Bloch Sphere
2.1. Bloch sphere as a unit sphere
2.2. Stereographic Projection
- Consider a unit sphere centred at the origin in with coordinates (x, y, z)
- The stereographic projection projects the sphere onto the complex plane from the north pole. That is, we draw a line from the north pole through P and see where it intersects the plane , which we can identify with the complex plane .
- Points on the unit sphere satisfy the . Parameterizing the sphere, the coordinates can also be represented as.
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The line from (0, 0, 1) through can be parameterized as:We need to find t for which r(t) intersects the plane z = 0Substituting t into the parameterization givesThe point corresponds to the complex numberFor a point on the sphere (except the north pole) to a point z’ in the complex plane is given by:The north pole maps to the point infinity in the extended complex plane.Since any point on the Bloch sphere can be written in Cartesian coordinates as:Plugging the coordinates into the stereographic projection formula:Use the trigonometric identitySinceWhich meansThe stereographic projection of a point on the Bloch sphere with coordinates onto the complex plane is given by:
2.3. Visualization of different types decoherence
3. Quantum error correction
3.1. Types of Errors:
3.2. Error Correction
3.2.1. Geometric Error Detection
3.2.2. Correcting Errors Using Complex Plane Geometry
- Commutativity: SiSj=SjSi for all i, j.
- Eigenvalue constraint: The stabilizers must satisfy Si meaning the encoded state is a +1 eigenstate of all stabilizer generators.
- Syndrome Measurement: Each stabilizer generator Si is measured, and the outcome is either +1 or -1. The collection of these outcomes forms an error syndrome, which provides information about the type and location of the error.
- Error Correction: Based on the error syndrome, the error is diagnosed as either a bit flip, phase flip, or both. Corrective operations (Pauli operators) are then applied to return the qubit to the codespace.
3.2.3. Optimizing Quantum Error Correction Codes
- Error Clustering: By representing qubit states and errors on the complex plane, error correction protocols can more easily cluster multiple errors and diagnose correlated errors. For example, in the case of multi-qubit systems, phase flips and bit flips across multiple qubits can be visualized as collective transformations in the complex plane, allowing for optimized code design that can simultaneously address multiple errors.
- Threshold Optimization: The complex plane representation also helps in optimizing the fault-tolerant threshold of quantum systems. By analyzing how errors accumulate and propagate on the complex plane, quantum engineers can adjust error correction protocols to ensure that the cumulative effects of small errors remain within correctable bounds. This leads to more efficient and resilient quantum error correction codes, minimizing the computational overhead required to correct errors while maintaining quantum coherence.
3.2.4. Advantages of the Complex Plane Approach
- Unified View of Errors: Bit flips, phase flips, and combined errors are treated as geometric transformations within a single framework, simplifying the error identification and correction process.
- Visualization of Gate Effects: Corrective quantum gates can be visualized as geometric operations (e.g., reflections, rotations), making it easier to design gate sequences that restore qubit states to their correct positions.
- Enhanced Efficiency: The complex plane provides an efficient way to detect and correct errors using minimal operations, reducing the computational overhead needed for error correction in practical quantum systems.
4. Conclusion
References
- Ingemar Bengtsson and Karol Życzkowski. Geometry of quantum states: an introduction to quantum entanglement, 2017.
- Jae-weon, Lee; et al. “Qubit geometry and conformal mapping”. In: arXiv preprint quant-ph/0201014 (2002).
- Maris Ozols. Geometry of a qubit. 2007.
- Bartosz Regula and Gerardo Adesso. “Geometric approach to entanglement quantification with polynomial measures”. In: Physical Review A 94.2 (2016), p. 022324. [CrossRef]
- SG Schirmer, T Zhang, and JV Leahy. “Orbits of quantum states and geometry of Bloch vectors for N-level systems”. In: Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and General 37.4 (2004), p. 1389. [CrossRef]
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