Sub-millisecond Entanglement and iSWAP Gate between Molecular Qubits
Lewis R.B. Picard, Annie J. Park, Gabriel E. Patenotte, Samuel, Gebretsadkan, David Wellnitz, Ana Maria Rey, Kang-Kuen Ni

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a sub-millisecond entangling iSWAP gate between molecular qubits using trapped NaCs molecules, achieving high fidelity and controllable interactions, advancing molecular quantum computing.
Contribution
It presents the first implementation of a universal two-qubit iSWAP gate with molecules, utilizing intrinsic dipolar interactions and state control.
Findings
Achieved a 94% fidelity Bell state with molecular qubits.
Controlled dipolar interactions by tuning trap polarization.
Identified motional states as primary decoherence source.
Abstract
Quantum computation (QC) and simulation rely on long-lived qubits with controllable interactions. Early work in quantum computing made use of molecules because of their readily available intramolecular nuclear spin coupling and chemical shifts, along with mature nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. Subsequently, the pursuit of many physical platforms has flourished. Trapped polar molecules have been proposed as a promising quantum computing platform, offering scalability and single-particle addressability while still leveraging inherent complexity and strong couplings of molecules. Recent progress in the single quantum state preparation and coherence of the hyperfine-rotational states of individually trapped molecules allows them to serve as promising qubits, with intermolecular dipolar interactions creating entanglement. However, universal two-qubit gates have not been demonstrated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
