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Researchers Build New Bridge Connecting Quantum Error Correction Codes With Quantum Field Theory

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Skoltech and University of Kentucky researchers say they built a new approach that connects quantum information theory with quantum field theory.

In a new study from Skoltech and the University of Kentucky, researchers have found a new connection between quantum information and quantum field theory. This work attests to the growing role of quantum information theory across various areas of physics. The paper was published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

Quantum plays an increasingly important role as an organizing principle connecting various branches of physics. In particular, the theory of quantum correction, which describes how to protect and recover information in quantum computers and other complex interacting systems, has become one of the building blocks of the modern understanding of .

“Normally, information stored in physical systems is localized. Say, a computer file occupies a particular small area of the hard drive. By “error” we mean any unforeseen or undesired interaction which scrambles information over an extended area. In our example, pieces of the computer file would be scattered over different areas of the hard drive. Error correcting codes are mathematical protocols that allow collecting these pieces together to recover the original information. They are in heavy use in data storage and communication systems. Quantum error correcting codes play a similar role in cases when the quantum nature of the physical system is important,” Anatoly Dymarsky, Associate Professor at the Skoltech Center for Energy Science and Technology (CEST), explains.

In a rather unexpected twist, scientists realized not too long ago that quantum gravity—the describing quantum dynamics of space and time—operates similar mathematical protocols to exchange information between different parts of space.

“The locality of information within quantum gravity remains one of the few open fundamental problems in theoretical physics. That is why the appearance of well-studied mathematical structures such as quantum error correcting codes is intriguing,” Dymarsky notes.

Yet the role of codes was only understood schematically, and the explicit mechanism behind the locality of information remains elusive.

In their paper, Dymarsky and his colleague, Alfred Shapere from the University of Kentucky Department of Physics and Astronomy, establish a novel connection between quantum error correcting codes and two-dimensional conformal field theories. The latter describe interactions of quantum particles and have become standard theoretical tools to describe many different phenomena, from fundamental elementary particles to quasi-particles emerging in quantum materials, such as graphene. Some of these conformal field theories also describe quantum gravity via holographic correspondence.

“Now we have a new playground to study the role of quantum error correcting codes in the context of . We hope this is a first step in understanding how locality of information actually works, and what hides behind all this beautiful mathematics,” Dymarsky concludes.

Source: Skoltech

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With a several-decades long background in journalism and communications, Matt Swayne has worked as a science communicator for an R1 university for more than 12 years, specializing in translating high tech and deep tech for the general audience. He has served as a writer, editor and analyst at The Quantum Insider since its inception. In addition to his service as a science communicator, Matt also develops courses to improve the media and communications skills of scientists and has taught courses. [email protected]

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