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TartanQEC | Speaker

Michael Vasmer

Inria Paris

Michael Vasmer is a researcher in quantum error correction at Inria Paris, where he holds a starting faculty position. He earned his PhD at UCL under the supervision of Dan Browne, followed by a postdoc at Perimeter Institute and IQC, mentored by Daniel Gottesman and Raymond Laflamme. He also has industry experience, having worked at Xanadu Quantum Technologies on architectures for fault-tolerant quantum computers. His research interests include fault-tolerant logical gates, decoding, and measurement-based quantum computation.

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Chutes and Ladders: Dynamical Automorphisms via the ZX-Calculus

The ZX-calculus is a powerful graphical language for manipulating quantum circuits, which has recently found many applications in quantum error correction. We extend this language to handle Floquet and other dynamical stabilizer codes via the connection between measurement-based code switching and gauge fixing (arXiv:1810.10037). We combine gauge-fixing steps to implement a closed loop in the space of stabilizer codes, returning to the original codespace up to a logical Clifford gate. These measurement-based paths in the space of stabilizer codes can be viewed as shortcuts, or "chutes and ladders", relative to single-qubit Clifford operations and qubit permutations. This yields a machine-interpretable method for constructing dynamical automorphisms and facilitates the search for implementations of desired logical gates. As an example, we implement a logical phase gate via distance-preserving code switching for the seven-qubit code bare code (arXiv:1702.01155), which has no non-trivial logical Clifford gates based on single-qubit Clifford operations and qubit permutations (arXiv:2409.18175).

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