Abstract

Abstract Quantum error correction is a crucial technology for realizing quantum computers. These computers achieve fault-tolerant quantum computing by detecting and correcting errors using decoding algorithms. Quantum error correction using neural network-based machine learning methods is a promising approach that is adapted to physical systems without the need to build noise models. In this paper, we use a distributed decoding strategy, which effectively alleviates the problem of exponential growth of the training set required for neural networks as the code distance of quantum error-correcting codes increases. Our decoding algorithm is based on renormalization group decoding and recurrent neural network decoder. The recurrent neural network is trained through the Resnet architecture to improve its decoding accuracy. Then we tested the decoding performance of our distributed strategy decoder, recurrent neural network decoder and the classic minimum weight perfect matching(MWPM) decoder for rotated surface codes with different code distances under the circuit noise model, the thresholds of this three decoders are about 0.0052, 0.0051, and 0.0049 respectively. Our results demonstrate that the distributed strategy decoder outperforms the other two decoders, achieving approximately a 5% improvement in decoding efficiency compared to the MWPM decoder and approximately a 2% improvement compared to the recurrent neural network decoder.

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