Grover's algorithm in a four-qubit silicon processor above the fault-tolerant threshold
Ian Thorvaldson, Dean Poulos, Christian M. Moehle, Saiful H. Misha,, Hermann Edlbauer, Jonathan Reiner, Helen Geng, Benoit Voisin, Michael T., Jones, Matthew B. Donnelly, Luis F. Pena, Charles D. Hill, Casey R. Myers,, Joris G. Keizer, Yousun Chung, Samuel K. Gorman

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a four-qubit silicon quantum processor executing Grover's algorithm with high fidelity, surpassing fault-tolerance thresholds, and showcases advanced multi-qubit control and entanglement in semiconductor spin qubits.
Contribution
The authors implement a four-qubit silicon processor achieving all operations above the fault-tolerant threshold and successfully execute Grover's algorithm with high probability.
Findings
Grover's algorithm achieved ~95% success probability.
All single-qubit fidelities exceeded 99.9%.
Generated a 96.2% fidelity GHZ state.
Abstract
Spin qubits in silicon are strong contenders for realizing a practical quantum computer. This technology has made remarkable progress with the demonstration of single and two-qubit gates above the fault-tolerant threshold and entanglement of up to three qubits. However, maintaining high fidelity operations while executing multi-qubit algorithms has remained elusive, only being achieved for two spin qubits to date due to the small qubit size, which makes it difficult to control qubits without creating crosstalk errors. Here, we use a four-qubit silicon processor with every operation above the fault tolerant limit and demonstrate Grover's algorithm with a ~95% probability of finding the marked state, one of the most successful implementations to date. Our four-qubit processor is made of three phosphorus atoms and one electron spin precision-patterned into 1.5 nm isotopically pure…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Computability, Logic, AI Algorithms · Quantum Information and Cryptography
