Blockade-induced exchange primitives for scalable neutral-atom QPU
Mohammadsadegh Khazali, Klaus M{\o}lmer

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a native, blockade-programmed controlled exchange operation in neutral-atom quantum processors, significantly reducing circuit depth and exposure time compared to traditional decompositions.
Contribution
It introduces a new method for implementing controlled exchange as a native operation in Rydberg-neutral-atom arrays, enabling more efficient quantum gates.
Findings
Achieved process fidelities above 99% for controlled-SWAP operations.
Reduced circuit depth and Rydberg-state exposure time by an order of magnitude.
Generalized the principle to multi-control and multiplexed operations.
Abstract
Many quantum hardware platforms natively support either phase or exchange operations, yet converting between these two forms of control typically incurs substantial overhead. Rydberg-blockade neutral-atom arrays are highly developed for phase control, while controlled exchange is usually obtained only through depth-intensive decompositions. Here, controlled exchange is realized as a native, blockade-programmed phenomenon in a collective excited manifold. Target atoms are engineered such that two competing exchange pathways between |01> and |10> destructively interfere, while a single collective four-photon channel mediated by a symmetric Rydberg excitation remains resonant and drives a direct SWAP, with all other qubit configurations undergoing an identity action. Exchange conditionality follows from blockade: exciting a control atom to a Rydberg state shifts and blocks the target…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
