Integration of the OMG architecture with ion-based quantum computers
ORAL
Abstract
The optical-metastable-ground (OMG) architecture has emerged as a promising architecture for quantum computation based on arrays of trapped ions or neutral atoms. By making use of long-lived metastable states to which qubits can be coherently shelved, this architecture can enable mid-circuit partial measurement of the qubit register without spatially separating the readout ancillae and sympathetic cooling without an additional atomic species.
The OMG architecture has typically been implemented using site-resolved shelving, which imposes the additional technical cost of either imaging the shelving beam onto individual qubits or using a second individually-addressed beam to light-shift selected qubits relative to resonance with the globally-applied shelving beam. Here, we demonstrate that the same functionality can be achieved with a global shelving operation plus single-qubit rotations within the ground and metastable manifolds. In particular, this approach makes the OMG architecture well suited to integration with IonQ’s quantum computers based on arrays of trapped Ba+ ions addressed by steerable qubit manipulation beams. We present the latest results of integrating the OMG architecture into IonQ’s newest generation of quantum computers.
The OMG architecture has typically been implemented using site-resolved shelving, which imposes the additional technical cost of either imaging the shelving beam onto individual qubits or using a second individually-addressed beam to light-shift selected qubits relative to resonance with the globally-applied shelving beam. Here, we demonstrate that the same functionality can be achieved with a global shelving operation plus single-qubit rotations within the ground and metastable manifolds. In particular, this approach makes the OMG architecture well suited to integration with IonQ’s quantum computers based on arrays of trapped Ba+ ions addressed by steerable qubit manipulation beams. We present the latest results of integrating the OMG architecture into IonQ’s newest generation of quantum computers.
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Presenters
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Michael L Goldman
IonQ, Inc.
Authors
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Michael L Goldman
IonQ, Inc.
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Jyothi Saraladevi
IonQ, Inc.
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Matthew Ebert
IonQ, Inc.
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Matthew Boguslawski
IonQ, Inc.
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Adam West
IonQ, Inc.
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Laird Egan
IonQ, Inc.
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Jeremy Sage
IonQ, Inc.
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Jonathan A Mizrahi
IonQ, Inc.