Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

High-fidelity parallel entangling gates on a neutral-atom quantum computer

430

Citations

86

References

2023

Year

Abstract

The ability to perform entangling quantum operations with low error rates in a scalable fashion is a central element of useful quantum information processing<sup>1</sup>. Neutral-atom arrays have recently emerged as a promising quantum computing platform, featuring coherent control over hundreds of qubits<sup>2,3</sup> and any-to-any gate connectivity in a flexible, dynamically reconfigurable architecture<sup>4</sup>. The main outstanding challenge has been to reduce errors in entangling operations mediated through Rydberg interactions<sup>5</sup>. Here we report the realization of two-qubit entangling gates with 99.5% fidelity on up to 60 atoms in parallel, surpassing the surface-code threshold for error correction<sup>6,7</sup>. Our method uses fast, single-pulse gates based on optimal control<sup>8</sup>, atomic dark states to reduce scattering<sup>9</sup> and improvements to Rydberg excitation and atom cooling. We benchmark fidelity using several methods based on repeated gate applications<sup>10,11</sup>, characterize the physical error sources and outline future improvements. Finally, we generalize our method to design entangling gates involving a higher number of qubits, which we demonstrate by realizing low-error three-qubit gates<sup>12,13</sup>. By enabling high-fidelity operation in a scalable, highly connected system, these advances lay the groundwork for large-scale implementation of quantum algorithms<sup>14</sup>, error-corrected circuits<sup>7</sup> and digital simulations<sup>15</sup>.

References

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