R&D: Assembly and Coherent Control of Register of Nuclear Spin Qubits
Anticipate that nuclear spin qubits will combine readily with technical advances that have led to larger arrays of individually trapped neutral atoms and high-fidelity entangling operations, thus accelerating realization of intermediate-scale quantum information processors.
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on July 18, 2022 at 2:01 pmNature Communications has published an article written by Katrina Barnes, Peter Battaglino, Benjamin J. Bloom, Kayleigh Cassella, Robin Coxe, Nicole Crisosto, Jonathan P. King, Stanimir S. Kondov, Krish Kotru, Stuart C. Larsen, Joseph Lauigan, Brian J. Lester, Mickey McDonald, Eli Megidish, Sandeep Narayanaswami, Ciro Nishiguchi, Remy Notermans, Lucas S. Peng, Albert Ryou, Tsung-Yao Wu, and Michael Yarwood, Atom Computing, Inc., Berkeley, CA, 94710, USA.
Abstract: “The generation of a register of highly coherent, but independent, qubits is a prerequisite to performing universal quantum computation. Here we introduce a qubit encoded in two nuclear spin states of a single 87Sr atom and demonstrate coherence approaching the minute-scale within an assembled register of individually-controlled qubits. While other systems have shown impressive coherence times through some combination of shielding, careful trapping, global operations, and dynamical decoupling, we achieve comparable coherence times while individually driving multiple qubits in parallel. We highlight that even with simultaneous manipulation of multiple qubits within the register, we observe coherence in excess of 105 times the current length of the operations, with \({T}_{2}^{{{{{\mathrm{echo}}}}}}=\left(40\pm 7\right)\) seconds. We anticipate that nuclear spin qubits will combine readily with the technical advances that have led to larger arrays of individually trapped neutral atoms and high-fidelity entangling operations, thus accelerating the realization of intermediate-scale quantum information processors.“