Observation of non-Abelian exchange statistics on a superconducting processor
ORAL
Abstract
Indistinguishability of particles is a fundamental principle of quantum mechanics. For all elementary and quasiparticles observed to date - including fermions, bosons, and Abelian anyons - this principle guarantees that the braiding of identical particles leaves the system unchanged. However, in two spatial dimensions, an intriguing possibility exists: braiding of non-Abelian anyons causes rotations in a space of topologically degenerate wavefunctions. Hence, it can change the observables of the system without violating the principle of indistinguishability. Despite the well developed mathematical description of non-Abelian anyons and numerous theoretical proposals, their experimental observation has remained elusive for decades. Using a superconducting quantum processor, we prepare the ground state of the surface code and manipulate it via unitary operations to form wavefunctions that are described by non-Abelian anyons. By implementing a unitary protocol to move the anyons, we experimentally verify the fusion rules of non-Abelian Ising anyons and braid them to realize their statistics. Building on our technique, we study the prospect of employing the anyons for quantum computation and utilize braiding to create an entangled state of anyons encoding three logical qubits. Our work represents a key step towards topological quantum computing.
–
Publication: Andersen et al., arXiv 2210.10255 (2022)<br>Lensky et al., arXiv 2210:09282 (2022)
Presenters
-
Trond I Andersen
Google LLC, Harvard University, Google Quantum AI
Authors
-
Trond I Andersen
Google LLC, Harvard University, Google Quantum AI
-
Yuri D Lensky
Cornell University
-
Kostyantyn Kechedzhi
Google LLC, Google, Google Quantum AI
-
Ilya K Drozdov
Google LLC
-
Andreas Bengtsson
Google LLC
-
Sabrina S Hong
Google LLC
-
Alexis Morvan
Google Quantum AI
-
Xiao Mi
Google
-
Alexander M Opremcak
Google Quantum AI, Google LLC, University of Wisconsin - Madison
-
Eun-Ah Kim
Cornell University
-
Igor Aleiner
Google LLC
-
Pedram Roushan
Google LLC