Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Alexis Morvan

Post image

I cannot decide what's my favorite slop: The single qubit CNOT gate or the tentative to make a graph for a bell pair or maybe the new notation ∣0^2 and ∣1 ^1 .

Source: a linked in post I saw while scrolling out of boredom

1 week ago 9 3 0 0
Preview
A scalable and real-time neural decoder for topological quantum codes Fault-tolerant quantum computing will require error rates far below those achievable with physical qubits. Quantum error correction (QEC) bridges this gap, but depends on decoders being simultaneously...

Google Deep Mind in collaboration with Google Quantum put on arxiv their new decoder AlphaQubit 2.

They show high accurancy and fast ML decoding on surface code and Colo(u)r code!

Its exciting to start seeing high accuracy and fast decoder for the color code!

arxiv.org/abs/2512.07737

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
Overview of RL control. (a) Hierarchy of the
feedback loops in control of an error-corrected quantum system. The low-level loop with analog control and readout signals (purple) occurs on a time scale of one QEC cycle; the
logical algorithm’s digital feedback loop (green) occurs on a
time scale of the decoding latency; the learning feedback loop
(pink), presented in this work, is not synchronized with the
lower levels, and occurs on a time scale determined by the relevant system drift. The indicated time scales are characteristic
of superconducting circuits quantum computing platform.(b) A small space-time chunk of the QEC circuit for the repetition code, highlighting two overlapping detecting regions.(c) One iteration of the learning process. In each epoch, a
batch of control policy candidates is sampled from the policy distribution. A certain number of QEC cycles is executed
with each policy candidate (shades of red and blue). The
acquired QEC data is used to compute rewards by estimating error detection rates for each detector. This information,
indicating the relative performance of each policy candidate,
is converted by the learning algorithm into a small gradient
step of the policy distribution. Then, a new batch of policy
candidates is sampled and the process repeats.

Overview of RL control. (a) Hierarchy of the feedback loops in control of an error-corrected quantum system. The low-level loop with analog control and readout signals (purple) occurs on a time scale of one QEC cycle; the logical algorithm’s digital feedback loop (green) occurs on a time scale of the decoding latency; the learning feedback loop (pink), presented in this work, is not synchronized with the lower levels, and occurs on a time scale determined by the relevant system drift. The indicated time scales are characteristic of superconducting circuits quantum computing platform.(b) A small space-time chunk of the QEC circuit for the repetition code, highlighting two overlapping detecting regions.(c) One iteration of the learning process. In each epoch, a batch of control policy candidates is sampled from the policy distribution. A certain number of QEC cycles is executed with each policy candidate (shades of red and blue). The acquired QEC data is used to compute rewards by estimating error detection rates for each detector. This information, indicating the relative performance of each policy candidate, is converted by the learning algorithm into a small gradient step of the policy distribution. Then, a new batch of policy candidates is sampled and the process repeats.

We taught a quantum computer to learn from its own mistakes-- without stopping.

Our RL framework repurposes QEC detection events as learning signals to stabilize the system.

Result: Improved Logical Error Rates for both Surface and Color codes on Willow!
see arxiv: arxiv.org/abs/2511.08493

5 months ago 14 3 1 0

Great work worth a read if you work on superconducting circuit with flux control!

5 months ago 5 0 0 0
Video

This weekend I tried another home experiment for my toddler. This one was suggested to me by none other than Michel Devoret!
It’s pretty cool. But I was more excited than the kid 😅

5 months ago 17 0 2 0
Post image

Are you a computer scientist and don't know what an OTOC is, but want to understand the problem solved in the recent Nature paper by Google Quantum AI? We wrote a 2-page note that explains the motivation and presents a simplified version of the problem for any input size.
scirate.com/arxiv/2510.1...

5 months ago 32 4 0 0
Preview
Quantum tunneling: URochester physicist explains a Nobel Prize–winning discovery Machiel Blok’s research in superconducting circuits builds on the quantum tunneling effects recognized by the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics.

The same quantum tunneling honored by this year’s #NobelPrize is driving #URochesterResearch

@machielblok.bsky.social is building quantum systems that do what classical computers can’t—inspired by the same fundamental questions

uofr.us/48o7I0K

#QuantumPhysics #QuantumComputing

6 months ago 6 3 0 1

Well, so much for my post about learning something new this Nobel week! The Physics prize went to J. Clarke, M. Devoret, and J. Martinis, the pioneers of my own field, superconducting circuits. An absolutely foundational work, and so well-deserved.

www.nobelprize.org/prizes/physi...

6 months ago 15 1 0 0

Nobel Prize week is almost here. I enjoy the predictions, but the real highlight for me is the forced exposure to science outside my field. It’s the one week I get a proper dive into research I’d otherwise miss.

6 months ago 2 0 2 1
Advertisement
Video

With my son, we played with vegetal oil, baking powder and vinegar colored in blue. The effect was really cool!

6 months ago 4 0 0 0
Preview
HSBC unleashes yet another “qombie”: a zombie claim of quantum advantage that isn’t Today, I got email after email asking me to comment on a new paper from HSBC—yes, the bank—together with IBM. The paper claims to use a quantum computer to get a 34% advantage in predic…

scottaaronson.blog?p=9170
Scott Aaronson on the recent « quantum advantage » claim.

My favorite quote from his comment:
« When they simulate the noiseless quantum computation classically, the advantage disappears? WTF?  »

6 months ago 5 0 0 0
Post image

Blog post: "Actually, you can't test if quantum uses complex numbers" algassert.com/post/2501

I doom the concept of that 2021 Nature paper by showing how to compile any distributed quantum protocol into real-only gates while preserving locality.

7 months ago 64 10 5 1
Post image

This work started w/ my struggle to understand fault-tolerant cluster states, and in particular why they always magically implement the same QEC problem as non-MBQC circuits. Understanding this correspondence as chain complex equivalence finally solved it for me, and I hope for other people too :)

7 months ago 6 1 1 1
Why haven't quantum computers factored 21 yet? Craig Gidney's computer science blog

Been awhile since I wrote a blog post.

Anyways... why haven't quantum computers factored 21 yet?

algassert.com/post/2500

7 months ago 65 13 5 4
QEC25

The QEC25 conference hosted by @yaleqi.bsky.social was really excellent, and videos of all talks are available. So much recent progress on quantum error correction!
qec25.yalepages.org

8 months ago 26 7 1 0

Amazing !! Thank you!
Congratulation on the manuscript!

7 months ago 1 0 0 0
Preview
Colour Codes Reach Surface Code Performance using Vibe Decoding Two-dimensional quantum colour codes hold significant promise for quantum error correction, offering advantages such as planar connectivity and low overhead logical gates. Despite their theoretical ap...

Color code decoding with some big claim: arxiv.org/abs/2508.15743

I wish they could try to benchmark this decoder against the experimental color code data from arxiv.org/pdf/2412.14256 zenodo.org/records/1423...

We are releasing experimental data so people can try out their decoding algorithms!

7 months ago 9 2 1 1
Preview
QED25 - Int'l Quantum Conf; Day 1, Recording 2

The recording of my talk on the Implementing the surface code using dynamic circuits at QEC2025 is available online!

yale.hosted.panopto.com/Panopto/Page...

8 months ago 1 0 0 0
Advertisement
Preview
Streamlining Quantum Error Correction and Application Development with CUDA-QX 0.4 | NVIDIA Technical Blog As quantum processor unit (QPU) builders and algorithm developers work to create large-scale, commercially viable quantum supercomputers, they are increasingly concentrating on quantum error…

Nvidia is releasing their open source tensor network decoder! As a small bonus they used experimental data from the google surface code experiemnt of 2023. I wonder how it would perform on more recent datasets developer.nvidia.com/blog/streaml...

8 months ago 5 0 0 0
Preview
Handling fabrication defects in hex-grid surface codes Recent work has shown that a hexagonal grid qubit layout, with only three couplers per qubit, is sufficient to implement the surface code with performance comparable to that of a traditional four-coup...

Looks like 3-coupler / hex implementation of the surface code can now tolerate dropout! www.arxiv.org/abs/2508.08116

8 months ago 8 2 1 1

I will be at the #QEC25 conference at Yale this week! I will be giving a talk on our work on dynamic implementation of the surface code on Monday

8 months ago 5 0 0 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

I'm often asked if I'll redo the 2019 quantum factoring estimate. Denser storage by yokes, smaller magic factories by cultivation, slimmer approx arithmetic by Chevignard et al… surely the cost is lower now?

Yes, it's lower now.

security.googleblog.com/2025/05/trac...

arxiv.org/abs/2505.15917

10 months ago 73 14 2 4
Preview
Quantum error correction of qudits beyond break-even - Nature Quantum error correction of a logical qutrit and ququart were experimentally realized beyond the break-even point with the Gottesman–Kitaev–Preskill bosonic code.

Pretty cool work on qudit encoded in GKP.

I think this is also the first experimental demo of a Error Corrected Qudit

www.nature.com/articles/s41...

11 months ago 3 0 0 0

Let’s be honest. It’s hard to beat the Surface code!

11 months ago 2 0 0 0

Detecting region with ZX calculus!

11 months ago 1 0 0 0
Advertisement

Now, if you ask the question the other way of how many circuit constructions would do that, there might be only this one?

11 months ago 0 0 0 0

My guess as to why the 3-coupler wasn't discovered before is that it shifts around the flavor of the stabilizers.

If you look at the stabilizer at the end of the cycles, for a given measurement qubit in the bulk, the color changes every other round. The 'ear' of the surface code patch shifts a bit.

11 months ago 1 0 1 0
Post image

Tomorrow I'm giving a zoom talk on magic state cultivation at the Simons quantum Colloquium.

Apr 8, 10am PST, see simons.berkeley.edu/programs-eve...

Cultivation is the (current) culmination of a decade of work ending the reign of T gates as the dominant cost in fault tolerant quantum computation.

1 year ago 30 3 3 1

Largest factorization done on a quantum computer.

Joke aside. That is an extremely instructive work!

1 year ago 3 0 0 0

In 1h (9am PST or 5pm CET) I will give a talk at the QASAR seminar hosted by @vasmer.bsky.social and @christophe.vuillot.info . I will present our work on implementing 3coupler, walking and iSWAP surface codes!

1 year ago 3 1 0 0