A tweezer array with 6100 highly coherent atomic qubits
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2403.12021v2
- Date: Tue, 19 Mar 2024 17:43:58 GMT
- Title: A tweezer array with 6100 highly coherent atomic qubits
- Authors: Hannah J. Manetsch, Gyohei Nomura, Elie Bataille, Kon H. Leung, Xudong Lv, Manuel Endres,
- Abstract summary: We experimentally realize an array of optical tweezers trapping over 6,100 neutral atoms in around 12,000 sites.
We also demonstrate a coherence time of 12.6(1) seconds, a record for hyperfine qubits in an optical tweezer array.
Our results, together with other recent developments, indicate that universal quantum computing with ten thousand atomic qubits could be a near-term prospect.
- Score: 0.5277756703318045
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Optical tweezer arrays have had a transformative impact on atomic and molecular physics over the past years, and they now form the backbone for a wide range of leading experiments in quantum computing, simulation, and metrology. Underlying this development is the simplicity of single particle control and detection inherent to the technique. Typical experiments trap tens to hundreds of atomic qubits, and very recently systems with around one thousand atoms were realized without defining qubits or demonstrating coherent control. However, scaling to thousands of atomic qubits with long coherence times and low-loss, high-fidelity imaging is an outstanding challenge and critical for progress in quantum computing, simulation, and metrology, in particular, towards applications with quantum error correction. Here, we experimentally realize an array of optical tweezers trapping over 6,100 neutral atoms in around 12,000 sites while simultaneously surpassing state-of-the-art performance for several key metrics associated with fundamental limitations of the platform. Specifically, while scaling to such a large number of atoms, we also demonstrate a coherence time of 12.6(1) seconds, a record for hyperfine qubits in an optical tweezer array. Further, we show trapping lifetimes close to 23 minutes in a room-temperature apparatus, enabling record-high imaging survival of 99.98952(1)% in combination with an imaging fidelity of over 99.99%. Our results, together with other recent developments, indicate that universal quantum computing with ten thousand atomic qubits could be a near-term prospect. Furthermore, our work could pave the way for quantum simulation and metrology experiments with inherent single particle readout and positioning capabilities at a similar scale.
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