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IBM is Using AI to Help Identify New Quantum Error Correction Codes
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IBM is Using AI to Help Identify New Quantum Error Correction Codes

IBM is Using AI to Help Identify New Quantum Error Correction Codes Logical Error Rate Performance for Given Physical Error Rates for Different QEC Codes. Credit:IBM Searching for optimal Quantum Error Correction (QEC) codes is an incredibly time-consuming and computationally demanding bottleneck due to the vast space of potential algebraic formulations. To address this, IBM researchers have introduced OpenEvolve, an open-source, LLM-guided evolutionary AI framework that dramatically accelerates the discovery of viable QEC codes. The framework establishes a powerful, two-way interplay between classical AI and quantum computing. It utilizes large language models (LLMs) to generate informed hypotheses for algebraic expressions that could serve as valid code candidates. Key Performance Results The research team tested their framework by targeting bivariate bicycle (BB) codes—a class of quantum low-density parity check (qLDPC) codes featured on IBM’s fault-tolerant quantum computing roadmap. QEC codes are formally evaluated using the format [[n, k, d]], where n represents physical qubits, k represents logical qubits, and d is the “distance” (error tolerance). In practice, maximizing these three parameters involves stark trade-offs. The evolutionary campaign successfully discovered 465 new error correction codes, showcasing diverse structural trade-offs. The table below shows a few examples of codes it found that provide different trade-offs, each of which might be advantageous for different situations. Discovered Code StructureHighlighted Properties & Trade-offsHigh Logical Qubit Count[[288,50,8]]Discovered a candidate featuring an eye-catching 50 logical qubits (k=50), drastically shattering the previous record of 16 within this code family (though bounded by a low distance d).Hardware-Optimized[[72,4,8]]Found a compact code requiring only 72 physical qubits (n=72), which may prove significantly easier to implement on near-term quantum hardware platforms.Balanced C

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