Abstract

Stabiliser states play a central role in the theory of quantum computation. For example, they are used to encode computational basis states in the most common quantum error correction schemes. Arbitrary quantum states admit many stabiliser decompositions: ways of being expressed as a superposition of stabiliser states. Understanding the structure of stabiliser decompositions has significant applications in verifying and simulating near-term quantum computers. We introduce and study the vector space of linear dependencies of n-qubit stabiliser states. These spaces have canonical bases containing vectors whose size grows exponentially in n. We construct elegant bases of linear dependencies of constant size three. Critically, our sparse bases can be computed without first compiling a dictionary of all n-qubit stabiliser states. We utilise them to explicitly compute the stabiliser extent of states of more qubits than is feasible with existing techniques. Finally, we delineate future applications to improving theoretical bounds on the stabiliser rank of magic states.

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