A universal neutral-atom quantum computer with individual optical addressing and non-destructive readout
Quantum computers must achieve large-scale, fault-tolerant operation to deliver on their promise of transformational processing power [1-4]. This will require thousands or millions of high-fidelity quantum gates and similar numbers of qubits [5]. Demonstrations using neutral-atom qubits trapped and...
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Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
15-08-2024
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Quantum computers must achieve large-scale, fault-tolerant operation to
deliver on their promise of transformational processing power [1-4]. This will
require thousands or millions of high-fidelity quantum gates and similar
numbers of qubits [5]. Demonstrations using neutral-atom qubits trapped and
manipulated by lasers have shown that this modality can provide high two-qubit
gate (CZ) fidelities and scalable operation [6-10]. However, the gates in these
demonstrations are driven by lasers that do not resolve individual qubits, with
universal computation enabled by physical mid-circuit shuttling of the qubits.
This relatively slow operation will greatly extend runtimes for useful,
large-scale computation. Here we demonstrate a universal neutral-atom quantum
computer with gate rates limited by optical switching times, rather than
shuttling, by individually addressing tightly focused laser beams at an array
of single atoms. We achieve CZ fidelity of 99.35(4)% and local single qubit RZ
gate fidelity of 99.902(8)%. Moreover, we demonstrate non-destructive readout
of alkali-atom qubits with sub-percent loss, which boosts operational speed.
This technique also enables us to measure 99.73(3)% CZ fidelity with atom-loss
events excluded, which is a record among long lived neutral-atom qubits and
highlights the path to higher fidelity and error correction. Our results
represent a critical step towards large-scale, fault-tolerant neutral-atom
quantum computers that can execute computations on practical timescales. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.08288 |