A silicon-based surface code quantum computer
Joe O'Gorman, Naomi H. Nickerson, Philipp Ross, John J. L. Morton and, Simon C. Benjamin

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the feasibility of a surface code quantum computer using widely separated solid state spins and movable probe spins, achieving high qubit density and robustness against fabrication imperfections.
Contribution
It introduces a novel orbital probe architecture that enables scalable, fault-tolerant quantum computing with solid state spins at large separations.
Findings
Surface code threshold tolerates substantial misalignments.
The proposed architecture achieves high qubit density.
The system is robust to fabrication imperfections.
Abstract
Individual impurity atoms in silicon can make superb individual qubits, but it remains an immense challenge to build a multi-qubit processor: There is a basic conflict between nanometre separation desired for qubit-qubit interactions, and the much larger scales that would enable control and addressing in a manufacturable and fault tolerant architecture. Here we resolve this conflict by establishing the feasibility of surface code quantum computing using solid state spins, or `data qubits', that are widely separated from one another. We employ a second set of `probe' spins which are mechanically separate from the data qubits and move in-and-out of their proximity. The spin dipole-dipole interactions give rise to phase shifts; measuring a probe's total phase reveals the collective parity of the data qubits along the probe's path. We introduce a protocol to balance the systematic errors…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
