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High-fidelity collisional quantum gates with fermionic atoms

3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

3 Pith papers citing it
abstract

Quantum simulations of electronic structure and strongly correlated quantum phases are widely regarded as among the most promising applications of quantum computing. These computations naturally benefit from native fermionic encodings, which intrinsically restrict the Hilbert space to physical states consistent with fermionic statistics and conservation laws like particle number and magnetization independent of gate errors. While ultracold atoms in optical lattices are established as powerful analog simulators of strongly correlated fermionic matter, neutral-atom platforms have concurrently emerged as versatile, scalable architectures for spin-based digital quantum computation. Unifying these capabilities requires high-fidelity gates that preserve motional degrees of freedom of fermionic atoms, paving the way for a new generation of programmable fermionic quantum processors. Here we demonstrate collisional entangling gates with fidelities up to 99.75(6)% and Bell state lifetimes exceeding $10\,s$, realized via controlled interactions of fermionic atoms in an optical superlattice. Using quantum gas microscopy, we microscopically characterize spin-exchange and pair-tunneling gates, and realize a robust, composite pair-exchange gate, a fundamental primitive for quantum chemistry simulations. Our results establish controlled collisions in optical lattices as a competitive and complementary approach to high entangling gate fidelities in neutral-atom quantum computers. When embedded within a fermionic architecture, this capability enables the preparation of complex quantum states and advanced readout protocols for a new class of scalable analog-digital hybrid quantum simulators. Combined with local addressing, these gates mark a crucial step towards a fully digital fermionic quantum computer based on the controlled motion and entanglement of fermionic neutral atoms.

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2025 3

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UNVERDICTED 3

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representative citing papers

Optimizing two-qubit gates for ultracold fermions in optical lattices

cond-mat.quant-gas · 2025-12-03 · unverdicted · novelty 4.0

Optimizing collision gates for ultracold fermions in double-well potentials reveals momentum-dependent interaction energies that are higher for atoms starting in separate subwells than the same subwell, supporting case-specific high-fidelity gates beyond Fermi-Hubbard models.

Mind the gaps: The fraught road to quantum advantage

quant-ph · 2025-10-22 · unverdicted · novelty 3.0 · 2 refs

The paper identifies four key hurdles in the transition from NISQ to FASQ quantum computers and argues that targeting them will accelerate progress toward useful quantum advantage.

citing papers explorer

Showing 3 of 3 citing papers.

  • Phase-Sensitive Measurements on a Fermi-Hubbard Quantum Processor quant-ph · 2025-09-01 · unverdicted · none · ref 44 · internal anchor

    Hardware-efficient protocol for measuring complex Loschmidt echoes in a Fermi-Hubbard optical-lattice processor via quench dynamics and tailored imaginary-time pulses.

  • Optimizing two-qubit gates for ultracold fermions in optical lattices cond-mat.quant-gas · 2025-12-03 · unverdicted · none · ref 33 · internal anchor

    Optimizing collision gates for ultracold fermions in double-well potentials reveals momentum-dependent interaction energies that are higher for atoms starting in separate subwells than the same subwell, supporting case-specific high-fidelity gates beyond Fermi-Hubbard models.

  • Mind the gaps: The fraught road to quantum advantage quant-ph · 2025-10-22 · unverdicted · none · ref 31 · 2 links · internal anchor

    The paper identifies four key hurdles in the transition from NISQ to FASQ quantum computers and argues that targeting them will accelerate progress toward useful quantum advantage.