Spacetime Spins: Statistical mechanics for error correction with stabilizer circuits
- đ¤ Speaker: Cory Aitchison, Centre for Quantum Information and Foundations, Department of Applied Maths and Theoretical Physics, University of Cambridge
- đ Date & Time: Tuesday 10 February 2026, 11:00 - 11:50
- đ Venue: Computer Laboratory, William Gates Building, Room FW11
Abstract
This paper is available at https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.21991
Abstract: A powerful method for analyzing quantum error-correcting codes is to map them onto classical statistical mechanics models. Such mappings have thus far mostly focused on static codes, possibly subject to repeated syndrome measurements. Recent progress in quantum error correction, however, has prompted new paradigms where codes emerge from stabilizer circuits in spacetime—a unifying perspective encompassing syndrome extraction circuits of static codes, dynamically generated codes, and logical operations. We show how to construct statistical mechanical models for stabilizer circuits subject to independent Pauli errors, by mapping logical equivalence class probabilities of errors to partition functions using the spacetime subsystem code formalism. We also introduce a modular language of spin diagrams for constructing the spin Hamiltonians, which we describe in detail focusing on independent circuit-level X-Z error channels. With the repetition and toric codes as examples, we use our approach to analytically rank logical error rates and thresholds between code implementations with standard and dynamic syndrome extraction circuits, describe the effect of transversal logical Clifford gates on logical error rates, and perform Monte Carlo simulations to estimate maximum likelihood thresholds. Our framework offers a universal prescription to analyze, simulate, and compare the decoding properties of any stabilizer circuit, while revealing the innate connections between dynamical quantum systems and noise-resilient phases of matter.
Series This talk is part of the Quantum Computer Architectures and Theory Seminar series.
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Tuesday 10 February 2026, 11:00-11:50