Supercharged two-dimensional tweezer array with more than 1000 atomic
qubits
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2310.09191v3
- Date: Fri, 9 Feb 2024 22:57:46 GMT
- Title: Supercharged two-dimensional tweezer array with more than 1000 atomic
qubits
- Authors: Lars Pause, Lukas Sturm, Marcel Mittenb\"uhler, Stephan Amann, Tilman
Preuschoff, Dominik Sch\"affner, Malte Schlosser, Gerhard Birkl
- Abstract summary: Supercharging one array designated as quantum processing unit with atoms from the secondary array significantly increases the number of qubits and the initial filling fraction.
This drastically enlarges attainable qubit cluster sizes and success probabilities.
The presented method substantiates neutral atom quantum information science by facilitating geometries of highly scalable quantum registers.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: We report on the realization of a large-scale quantum-processing architecture
surpassing the tier of 1000 atomic qubits. By tiling multiple
microlens-generated tweezer arrays, each operated by an independent laser
source, we can eliminate laser-power limitations in the number of allocatable
qubits. Already with two separate arrays, we implement combined 2D
configurations of 3000 qubit sites with a mean number of 1167(46) single-atom
quantum systems. The transfer of atoms between the two arrays is achieved with
high efficiency. Thus, supercharging one array designated as quantum processing
unit with atoms from the secondary array significantly increases the number of
qubits and the initial filling fraction. This drastically enlarges attainable
qubit cluster sizes and success probabilities allowing us to demonstrate the
defect-free assembly of clusters of up to 441 qubits with persistent
stabilization at near-unity filling fraction over tens of detection cycles. The
presented method substantiates neutral atom quantum information science by
facilitating configurable geometries of highly scalable quantum registers with
immediate application in Rydberg-state mediated quantum simulation,
fault-tolerant universal quantum computation, quantum sensing, and quantum
metrology.
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