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A quantum processor based on coherent transport of entangled atom arrays

ORAL

Abstract

The ability to engineer parallel, programmable operations between desired qubits within a quantum processor is central for building scalable quantum information systems. In most state-of-the-art approaches, qubits interact locally, constrained by the connectivity associated with their fixed spatial layout. Here, we demonstrate a quantum processor with dynamic, nonlocal connectivity, in which entangled qubits are coherently transported in a highly parallel manner across two spatial dimensions, in between layers of single- and two-qubit operations [1]. Our approach makes use of neutral atom arrays trapped and transported by optical tweezers; hyperfine states are used for robust quantum information storage, and excitation into Rydberg states is used for entanglement generation. We use this architecture to realize programmable generation of entangled graph states such as cluster states and a 7-qubit Steane code state. Furthermore, we shuttle entangled ancilla arrays to realize a surface code with 19 qubits and a toric code state on a torus with 24 qubits. Finally, we use this architecture to realize a hybrid analog-digital evolution and employ it for measuring entanglement entropy in quantum simulations, experimentally observing non-monotonic entanglement dynamics associated with quantum many-body scars. Realizing a long-standing goal, these results pave the way toward scalable quantum processing and enable new applications ranging from simulation to metrology. I will also highlight other recent many-body physics results and discuss future applications.

[1] Bluvstein, et al, (2021). arXiv:2112.03923.

Publication: Bluvstein, et al. A quantum processor based on coherent transport of entangled atom arrays. (2021). arXiv:2112.03923.

Presenters

  • Dolev Bluvstein

    Harvard University

Authors

  • Dolev Bluvstein

    Harvard University

  • Harry Levine

    Harvard University, AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Harvard University, AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Giulia Semeghini

    Harvard University

  • Tout T Wang

    Harvard University

  • Sepehr Ebadi

    Harvard University

  • Marcin Kalinowski

    Harvard University

  • Alexander Keesling

    Harvard University, QuEra, QuEra Computing, Harvard University

  • Tom Manovitz

    Harvard University

  • Simon Evered

    Harvard University

  • Nishad Maskara

    Harvard University

  • Hannes Pichler

    Caltech, Innsbruck, University of Innsbruck; Austrian Academy of Sciences, University of Innsbruck, IQOQI

  • Markus Greiner

    Harvard University

  • Vladan Vuletic

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Mikhail Lukin

    Harvard University