Robust site-resolved quantum gates in an optical lattice via inhomogeneous control
Jae Hoon Lee, Enrique Montano, Ivan H. Deutsch, Poul S. Jessen

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a control method for ultracold atoms in optical lattices that enables high-fidelity, site-specific quantum gates with minimal crosstalk, robustness, and simultaneous multi-site operations, advancing quantum information processing.
Contribution
It introduces inhomogeneous control techniques to enhance site-resolved quantum gate performance in optical lattices, achieving high fidelity and robustness with a single global control waveform.
Findings
Achieved ~95% average gate fidelity via randomized benchmarking.
Enabled simultaneous different gates at adjacent sites with a single control.
Demonstrated robustness against lattice position uncertainties.
Abstract
Ultracold atoms in optical lattices are an important platform for quantum information science, lending itself naturally to quantum simulation of many-body physics and providing a possible path towards a scalable quantum computer. To realize its full potential, atoms at individual lattice sites must be accessible to quantum control and measurement. This challenge has so far been met with a combination of high-resolution microscopes and resonance addressing that have enabled both site-resolved imaging and spin-flips. Here we show that methods borrowed from the field of inhomogeneous control can greatly increase the performance of resonance addressing in optical lattices, allowing us to target arbitrary single-qubit gates on desired sites, with minimal crosstalk to neighboring sites and greatly improved robustness against uncertainty in the lattice position. We further demonstrate the…
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