Crystallographic Symmetry Generates Phononic Holonomic Gates with Biased-Erasure Channels
El Mustapha Mansouri, Keigo Arai

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how crystallographic symmetry can enable phononic holonomic gates with biased-error channels in solid-state quantum processors, improving error correction and gate fidelity.
Contribution
It introduces a symmetry-based approach to phononic control in Lambda manifolds, achieving high-fidelity holonomic gates with biased-erasure error channels.
Findings
Achieved 99.88% fidelity in simulations within 1.833 microseconds.
Channel has 0.47% erasure probability and 0.168% residual Z error.
Biasing errors improves quantum error correction performance.
Abstract
Solid-state processors require control layers whose errors are legible to quantum-error-correction decoders. We show that crystallographic symmetry can provide such a layer in strain-active Lambda manifolds. When the projected strain tensor and Lambda-transition operators share a multiplicity-one two-dimensional irreducible representation, symmetry fixes the linear strain interaction to a scalar dot product. Two phase-locked mechanical modes synthesize a circular strain field, enabling complex phononic Lambda-leg control without local microwave near fields. On this manifold we construct a superadiabatic echo-lune holonomic gate using Lambda-leg control and a resonant double-quantum counterdiabatic tone. Rotating-frame simulations of a nitrogen-vacancy center give 99.88% conditional average fidelity in 1.833 microseconds, or 99.40% when leakage is counted as error. A resonant gigahertz…
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