Researchers develop the world's fastest two-qubit gate between two single atoms
Fig. 1. Conceptual diagram of the world’s fastest two-qubit gate. Two atoms captured in optical tweezers (red light) with a separation of a micrometer are manipulated by a ultrafast laser pulse (blue light) shone for only 10 picoseconds. Credit: Dr. Takafumi Tomita (IMS)

A research group led by graduate student Yeelai Chew, Assistant Professor Sylvain de Léséleuc and Professor Kenji Ohmori at the Institute for Molecular Science, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, is using atoms cooled to almost absolute zero and trapped in optical tweezers separated by a micron or so (see Fig. 1). By manipulating the atoms with a special laser light for 10 picoseconds, they succeeded in executing the world’s fastest two-qubit gate, a fundamental operation essential for quantum computing, which operates in just 6.5 nanoseconds.

This ultrafast quantum computer, which uses ultrafast lasers to manipulate cold atoms trapped with optical tweezers, is expected to be a completely new quantum computer that breaks through the limitations of the superconducting and trapped-ion types currently in development.

The results are published in the online edition of Nature Photonics on August 8, 2022.

Cold-atom based quantum computers

Cold-atom quantum computers are based on laser cooling and trapping techniques celebrated by the Nobel Prizes of 1997 (S. Chu, C. Cohen-Tannoudji and W.D. Philipps, “Cooling and trapping atoms with laser light”) and 2018 (A. Ashkin, invention of the optical tweezers). These techniques facilitate the arrangement of arrays of cold atoms into arbitrary shapes with optical tweezers and allow each to be observed individually.

Because atoms are natural quantum systems, they can easily store quantum bits of information, the basic building block (“qubit”) of a quantum computer (see Fig. 2). In addition, these atoms are very well-isolated from the surrounding environment and are independent of one another. The coherence time (the time during which quantum superposition persists) of a qubit can reach several seconds. A two-qubit gate (an essential basic arithmetic element for quantum computing) is then performed by exciting one electron of the atom into a giant electronic orbital, called a Rydberg orbital.

Researchers develop the world's fastest two-qubit gate between two single atoms
Fig. 2. Schematic of a quantum bit using Rubidium atoms. Credit: Dr. Takafumi Tomita (IMS)

With these techniques, the cold-atom platform has emerged as one of the most promising candidates for quantum computer hardware, attracting attention from industry, academia and governments around the world. In particular, it has revolutionary potential in that it can be easily scaled up while maintaining high coherence compared to the superconducting and trapped-ion types that are currently being developed.

Quantum gates

Quantum gates are the basic arithmetic elements that make up quantum computing. They correspond to the logic gates such as AND and OR in conventional classical computers. There are one-qubit gates that manipulate the state of a single qubit and two-qubit gates that generate quantum entanglement between two qubits. The two-qubit gate is the source of the high-speed performance in quantum computers and is technically challenging. The most important two-qubit gate is called a “controlled-Z gate (CZ gate),” which is an operation that flips the quantum superposition of a first qubit from 0 + 1 to 0—1 depending on the state (0 or 1) of a second qubit (see Fig. 3).

Researchers develop the world's fastest two-qubit gate between two single atoms
Fig. 3. Operation of the quantum gate. (Upper) When atom 1 is in the “0” state, nothing happens. When atom 1 is in the “1” state, the sign of the superposition of atom 2 is changed from positive to negative. This operation is at the heart of quantum algorithm that runs on quantum computers. Credit: Dr. Takafumi Tomita (IMS)

The accuracy (fidelity) of the quantum gate is easily degraded by noise from the external environment and the operating laser, which makes the development of quantum computers difficult. Since the time scale of noise is generally slower than one microsecond, if a quantum gate that is sufficiently faster than this can be realized, it will be possible to avoid the degradation of calculation accuracy due to noise and bring us much closer to realizing a practical quantum computer. Therefore, for the past 20 years, all quantum computer hardware research has been pursuing faster gates. The ultrafast gate of 6.5 nanoseconds achieved by this research with the cold-atom hardware is more than two orders of magnitude faster than noise and thus can ignore its effects. The previous world record was 15 nanoseconds, achieved by Google AI in 2020 with superconducting circuits.

Experimental method

The experiment was conducted using rubidium atoms. First, two rubidium atoms in the gas phase that had been cooled to an ultra-low temperature of about 1/100,000 of a Kelvin using laser beams were arranged at a micron interval with optical tweezers. Researchers then irradiated them with ultrashort laser pulses that emitted light for only 1/100 billionth of a second, and observed the changes that occurred. Two electrons trapped respectively in the smallest orbitals (5S) of two adjacent atoms (atom 1 and atom 2) were knocked into giant electronic orbitals (Rydberg orbitals, here 43D). The interaction between these giant atoms then led to a periodic, back-and-forth exchange of the orbital shape and electron energy occurring with a period of 6.5 nanoseconds.

After one oscillation, the laws of quantum physics dictate that the sign of the wavefunction is flipped, thus realizing the two-qubit gate (controlled-Z gate). Using this phenomenon, they performed a quantum gate operation using a qubit (Fig. 2) in which the 5P electronic state is the “0” state and the 43D electronic state is the “1” state. Atoms 1 and 2 were prepared as qubits 1 and 2, respectively, and the energy exchange was induced using an ultrashort laser pulse. During one energy-exchange cycle, the sign of the superposition state of qubit 2 was reversed only when qubit 1 was in the “1” state (Fig. 3). This sign flip was experimentally observed by the research group, thus demonstrating that a two-qubit gate can be operated in 6.5 nanoseconds, the fastest in the world.

The realization of the world’s fastest ultrafast gate, achieved this time by a completely new method of “manipulating two micron-spaced atoms cooled to almost absolute zero using an ultrafast laser,” is expected to greatly accelerate worldwide attention to cold-atom hardware. More information: Sylvain Léséleuc, Ultrafast energy exchange between two single Rydberg atoms on a nanosecond timescale, Nature Photonics (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41566-022-01047-2. www.nature.com/articles/s41566-022-01047-2 Journal information: Nature Photonics

Provided by National Institutes of Natural Sciences Citation: Researchers develop the world’s fastest two-qubit gate between two single atoms (2022, August 8) retrieved 8 August 2022 from https://phys.org/news/2022-08-world-fastest-two-qubit-gate-atoms.html This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

NEWS RELATED

Caterham rides wave of revival as Japan owner seeks to ‘turn around’ UK sports car brand

Japanese fans of the Caterham Seven are scrambling to purchase the iconic sports cars, built in the English county of Kent, as the brand rides a wave of enthusiasm in the Far East, the company’s new owner has said. Kazuho Takahashi, founder and CEO of Nagoya-based VT Holdings Co., ...

View more: Caterham rides wave of revival as Japan owner seeks to ‘turn around’ UK sports car brand

Star Trek actress Nichelle Nichols' ashes headed for solar orbit in 'eternal memorial'

More than 200 capsules carrying human remains and DNA are set to go inside the upper rocket stage that will fly on into deep space - beyond the gravitational pull of the Earth and moon - and eventually enter a perpetual solar orbit.

View more: Star Trek actress Nichelle Nichols' ashes headed for solar orbit in 'eternal memorial'

Google Brings Back Duo’s Old Icon After It Rebrands As Meet — But Why?

(Photo : Screenshot From Google Duo Official Website)Google Rebrands Duo as Meet, the Old Meet App as Google Meet (Original) In June, Google announced its plan to merge its two different video calling platforms, Meet and Duo. A month later, the tech giant started incorporating more of Meet’s features ...

View more: Google Brings Back Duo’s Old Icon After It Rebrands As Meet — But Why?

Mark Zuckerberg, Sheryl Sandberg Will No Longer Give Depositions Over the Cambridge Analytica Scandal

Meta has chosen the easy way out. The social media giant has recently agreed to settle with the plaintiffs of the lawsuit connected to the Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg were previously in line to give hours of deposition as part ...

View more: Mark Zuckerberg, Sheryl Sandberg Will No Longer Give Depositions Over the Cambridge Analytica Scandal

Samsung Shares Video of How Foldable Phones are Assembled with the Help of Robots

In terms of durability, Samsung made a leap with the foldables that it released last year. The Z Flip 3 and Z Fold 3 offer serious water resistance plus an IPX8 rating, indicating that the company is serious when it comes to making durable devices. This year’s phone, the Z ...

View more: Samsung Shares Video of How Foldable Phones are Assembled with the Help of Robots

New Twitter Shopping Features Pose ‘High Risks’ to Cause ‘individual, Societal Harm,’ Says Leaked Internal Memo

Newly announced shopping features on Twitter pose considerable content moderation risks that may lead to “individual and societal harm,” a leaked memo addressed to Twitter employees retrieved by The Verge revealed. The memo was emailed in early July to Twitter employees, a source who knows the content of the ...

View more: New Twitter Shopping Features Pose ‘High Risks’ to Cause ‘individual, Societal Harm,’ Says Leaked Internal Memo

Netflix Confirms Testing Various Gaming Features, Including Game Handles

Netflix is testing game handles in an effort to boost offers for its gaming sector. Beginning last month, Netflix rolled out and enabled a feature that lets users establish distinctive game handles in a selection of its mobile games, starting with Into The Breach and moving on to Mahjong ...

View more: Netflix Confirms Testing Various Gaming Features, Including Game Handles

US Justice Department Likely to File Antitrust Lawsuit Against Apple Over App Store, AirTags

Lawyers at the DOJ are preparing to file an antitrust lawsuit against Apple by the end of the year. Apple may be closing 2022 with a lawsuit from the US Justice Department, as a person with direct knowledge of the matter confirmed that lawyers are in the early stages ...

View more: US Justice Department Likely to File Antitrust Lawsuit Against Apple Over App Store, AirTags

Snowy Hydro boss Paul Broad says fallout with Chris Bowen contributed to resignation

Lights, camera, accelerator! Techsauce Global Summit opens with news of startup & SME supports

Waze is Shutting Down Its Carpool App — But Why?

Global tech start-ups from skyscraper-cleaning robots to AI news anchors find their footing in the Greater Bay Area

Verizon Visible Customers Complain of Problematic Service After 'Upgrading'

Purported price of Netflix's upcoming ad-supported plan revealed

Instagram Clarifies Viral Post Saying It Does Not Share Precise Location of Users

Why Is NASA Sending Yeast To Space Through Artemis I? UBC Student Explains Reason

US-China tech war: Beijing forges ahead with all-in chip effort, brushing aside asset bubbles and graft probes

See James Webb Telescope’s most dazzling photos like never before

How to download Wordle so you can play for free forever

Thor: Love and Thunder deleted scenes detailed by Marvel

OTHER NEWS