Fast, continuous and coherent atom replacement in a neutral atom qubit array
Yiyi Li, Yicheng Bao, Michael Peper, Chenyuan Li, and Jeff D. Thompson

TL;DR
This paper introduces a rapid, continuous atom replacement method in neutral atom qubit arrays using metastable ytterbium, enabling deep quantum circuits by efficiently managing atom loss without disturbing existing qubits.
Contribution
The authors demonstrate a novel fast atom replacement technique with a reservoir and tweezers, significantly improving the speed and continuity of atom management in neutral atom quantum processors.
Findings
Atom replacement rate up to 500 times per second
New qubit arrays prepared at 30 times per second
Existing qubits remain undisturbed during reloading
Abstract
Neutral atom quantum processors are a promising platform for scalable quantum computing. An obstacle to implementing deep quantum circuits is managing atom loss, which constitutes a significant fraction of all errors. Current approaches are either not capable of replacing lost atoms in the middle of a circuit -- and therefore restricted to fixed, short circuit depths -- or require more than an order of magnitude longer time than gate and measurement operations to do so. In this work, we demonstrate fast, continuous atom replacement leveraging the metastable Yb qubit. A continuously loaded reservoir near the computation zone enables on-demand atom extraction with tweezers up to 500 times per second. New qubit arrays can be prepared 30 times per second when including single-atom preparation, non-destructive imaging and initialization. Importantly, existing qubits are completely…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
