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🍕 6:00–6:15 PM – Pizza & Social
🧠 6:15–7:15 PM – Presentation
🍻 7:15–7:45 PM – Social

Description
Fault-tolerant quantum computation enables quantum computations to be carried out while resisting unwanted noise, but implementing a universal logical gate set remains a challenge. Stabilizer codes provide robust error protection, but each code supports only a limited family of native fault-tolerant logical gates, requiring additional techniques—such as code concatenation, code switching, or magic state distillation—to access non-native operations. These techniques can be costly, nondeterministic, and often tailored to specific codes or architectures.

In this talk, we present a stabilizer code-generic framework for universal fault-tolerant quantum computation based on ancilla mediation: ancillary registers are used strictly for communication and gate transformation without storing data themselves. By leveraging helper codes—most notably the generalized Shor code and its Hadamard dual—along with mid-circuit measurements, the framework enables deterministic implementations of logical Clifford and T gates that do not consume ancilla registers and do not modify the underlying data code or register. We will outline the key constructions (including controlled-flip primitives, stabilizer-generic Hadamards, and Z-rotations), discuss validation and resource overhead considerations, and highlight how stabilizer-generic gates enable communication between heterogeneous stabilizer encodings.

Speaker
Nicholas Papadopoulos grew up in Avon, CT and received a B.A. in computer science at Boston University in 2016. He worked professionally as a software engineer in the fields of bioinformatics, high-security transportation, and quantum computing/networking before pursuing higher education at the University of Colorado Boulder in 2021. He is currently a research assistant in the computer science department at the University of Colorado Boulder with interests in quantum computing algorithms. He is the author of a paper describing a protocol to increase eavesdropping detection during quantum key distribution, increasing cryptography security, as well as a paper describing a family of algorithms containing Ramsey interferometry and Quantum Phase Estimation, bridging the gap between these two seemingly distinct algorithms.

Related topics

Events in Boulder, CO
Quantum Algorithms
Quantum Computing
Quantum Entanglement

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