Scalable quantum processors empowered by the Fermi scattering of Rydberg electrons

Communications Physics(2023)

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Abstract
Quantum computing promises exponential speed-up compared to its classical counterpart. While the neutral atom processors are the pioneering platform in terms of scalability, the dipolar Rydberg gates impose the main bottlenecks on the scaling of these devices. This article presents an alternative scheme for neutral atom quantum processing, based on the Fermi scattering of a Rydberg electron from ground-state atoms in spin-dependent lattice geometries. Instead of relying on Rydberg pair-potentials, the interaction is controlled by engineering the electron cloud of a sole Rydberg atom. The present scheme addresses the scaling obstacles in Rydberg processors by exponentially suppressing the population of short-lived states and by operating in ultra-dense atomic lattices. The restoring forces in molecule type Rydberg-Fermi potential preserve the trapping over a long interaction period. Furthermore, the proposed scheme mitigates different competing infidelity criteria, eliminates unwanted cross-talks, and significantly suppresses the operation depth in running complicated quantum algorithms. Current Rydberg quantum processors suffer from limitations in fidelity and scalability. Here, the authors address these limitations by proposing highly controllable multi-qubit operations that utilize the Fermi scattering of Rydberg electrons trapped in an optical lattice.
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Key words
Quantum information,Quantum simulation,Physics,general
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