Characterizing Dynamic Majorana Hybridization for Universal Quantum
Computing
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2403.02481v1
- Date: Mon, 4 Mar 2024 21:00:36 GMT
- Title: Characterizing Dynamic Majorana Hybridization for Universal Quantum
Computing
- Authors: Themba Hodge, Eric Mascot, Dan Crawford, Stephan Rachel
- Abstract summary: This work presents an accessible method to track transitions within the low-energy subspace and predict the output of braids with hybridized Majorana modes.
As an application, we characterize Pauli qubit-errors, as demonstrated on an X-gate, critical for the successful operation of any quantum computer.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
- Abstract: Qubits built out of Majorana zero modes have long been theorized as a
potential pathway toward fault-tolerant topological quantum computation. Almost
unavoidable in these processes is Majorana wavefunction overlap, known as
hybridization, which arise throughout the process when Majorana modes get close
to each other. This breaks the ground state degeneracy, leading to qubit errors
in the braiding process. This work presents an accessible method to track
transitions within the low-energy subspace and predict the output of braids
with hybridized Majorana modes. As an application, we characterize Pauli
qubit-errors, as demonstrated on an X-gate, critical for the successful
operation of any quantum computer. Further, we perform numerical simulations to
demonstrate how to utilize the hybridization to implement arbitrary rotations,
along with a two-qubit controlled magic gate, thus providing a demonstration of
universal quantum computing.
Related papers
- Dissipationless topological quantum computation for Majorana objects in sparse-dense mixed encoding process [8.345976310980795]
Topological quantum computation based on Majorana objects is subject to a significant challenge.
Some of the two-qubit quantum gates rely on the fermion parity of the qubits.
We devise topological operations that allow for the non-dissipative correction of information from undesired fermion parity to the desired one.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-07-16T09:51:17Z) - Braiding-based quantum control of a Majorana qubit built from quantum
dots [0.0]
We describe the dynamics of a Majorana qubit built from quantum dots controlled by time-dependent gate voltages.
We provide quantitative guidelines to suppress both diabatic errors and disorder-induced qubit dephasing.
Our simulations predict realistic features that are expected to be seen in future braiding experiments with Majorana zero modes and other topological qubit architectures.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-05-15T09:08:37Z) - Blueprint of a Molecular Spin Quantum Processor [0.0]
We present the blueprint of a Molecular Spin Quantum Processor consisting of single Molecular Nanomagnets, acting as qudits.
We show how to implement a universal set of gates in such a platform and to readout the final qudit state.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-05-02T18:00:06Z) - Quantum process tomography of continuous-variable gates using coherent
states [49.299443295581064]
We demonstrate the use of coherent-state quantum process tomography (csQPT) for a bosonic-mode superconducting circuit.
We show results for this method by characterizing a logical quantum gate constructed using displacement and SNAP operations on an encoded qubit.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-03-02T18:08:08Z) - Quantum emulation of the transient dynamics in the multistate
Landau-Zener model [50.591267188664666]
We study the transient dynamics in the multistate Landau-Zener model as a function of the Landau-Zener velocity.
Our experiments pave the way for more complex simulations with qubits coupled to an engineered bosonic mode spectrum.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-11-26T15:04:11Z) - Observing and braiding topological Majorana modes on programmable
quantum simulators [0.0]
A collective excitation, known as a topological Majorana mode, is naturally stable against perturbations.
This work shows that long-sought quantum phenomena can be realized by anyone in cloud-run quantum simulations.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-28T20:41:27Z) - Quantum simulation of fermionic systems using hybrid digital-analog
quantum computing approach [0.0]
We show how digital-analog approach can be applied to simulate the dynamics of fermionic systems.
We find that an optimal connectivity topology of qubits for the digital-analog simulation of fermionic systems of arbitrary dimensionality is a chain for spinless fermions and a ladder for spin-1/2 particles.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-12-30T18:24:47Z) - An Algebraic Quantum Circuit Compression Algorithm for Hamiltonian
Simulation [55.41644538483948]
Current generation noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computers are severely limited in chip size and error rates.
We derive localized circuit transformations to efficiently compress quantum circuits for simulation of certain spin Hamiltonians known as free fermions.
The proposed numerical circuit compression algorithm behaves backward stable and scales cubically in the number of spins enabling circuit synthesis beyond $mathcalO(103)$ spins.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-08-06T19:38:03Z) - Algebraic Compression of Quantum Circuits for Hamiltonian Evolution [52.77024349608834]
Unitary evolution under a time dependent Hamiltonian is a key component of simulation on quantum hardware.
We present an algorithm that compresses the Trotter steps into a single block of quantum gates.
This results in a fixed depth time evolution for certain classes of Hamiltonians.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-08-06T19:38:01Z) - Error mitigation and quantum-assisted simulation in the error corrected
regime [77.34726150561087]
A standard approach to quantum computing is based on the idea of promoting a classically simulable and fault-tolerant set of operations.
We show how the addition of noisy magic resources allows one to boost classical quasiprobability simulations of a quantum circuit.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-03-12T20:58:41Z) - Simulating nonnative cubic interactions on noisy quantum machines [65.38483184536494]
We show that quantum processors can be programmed to efficiently simulate dynamics that are not native to the hardware.
On noisy devices without error correction, we show that simulation results are significantly improved when the quantum program is compiled using modular gates.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-04-15T05:16:24Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.