The iSWAP gate with polar molecules: Robustness criteria for entangling operations
Matteo Bergonzoni, Sven Jandura, Guido Pupillo

TL;DR
This paper develops a quantum optimal control framework to design robust iSWAP gates with polar molecules, addressing sensitivity issues and achieving high fidelities suitable for quantum computing.
Contribution
It introduces a perturbative approach to create robust two-qubit gates, demonstrating the necessity of local controls for robustness and providing optimal control solutions under realistic conditions.
Findings
Robustness requires breaking exchange symmetry with local controls.
Optimal control pulses can be smooth and time-efficient.
Gate fidelities compatible with error correction are achievable.
Abstract
Ultracold polar molecules in optical lattices or tweezer arrays offer a promising platform for quantum information processing and simulation, thanks to their rich internal structure and long-range dipolar interactions. Recent experimental advances now allow precise control over individual molecules, enabling two-qubit gates based on the iSWAP gate. A key challenge is however the sensitivity to variations of the dipole-dipole interaction strength - stemming from motion of the molecules and uncertainty on the precise positioning of external confining potentials - that limits current gate fidelities. To address this, we develop a quantum optimal control framework, based on a perturbative approach, to design gates that are robust with respect to quasi-static deviations of Hamiltonian parameters, and provide criteria to evaluate a priori whether a gate can be made robust for a given control…
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