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Quantum simulation and computing with Rydberg-interacting qubits

M. Morgado, S. Whitlock

2021AVS Quantum Science326 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Arrays of optically trapped atoms excited to Rydberg states have recently emerged as a competitive physical platform for quantum simulation and computing, where high-fidelity state preparation and readout, quantum logic gates, and controlled quantum dynamics of more than 100 qubits have all been demonstrated. These systems are now approaching the point where reliable quantum computations with hundreds of qubits and realistically thousands of multiqubit gates with low error rates should be within reach for the first time. In this article, the authors give an overview of the Rydberg quantum toolbox, emphasizing the high degree of flexibility for encoding qubits, performing quantum operations, and engineering quantum many-body Hamiltonians. The authors then review the state-of-the-art concerning high-fidelity quantum operations and logic gates as well as quantum simulations in many-body regimes. Finally, the authors discuss computing schemes that are particularly suited to the Rydberg platform and some of the remaining challenges on the road to general purpose quantum simulators and quantum computers.

Topics & Concepts

Quantum error correctionQuantum computerQuantum networkQuantum technologyQuantum gateQubitQuantum mechanicsOpen quantum systemPhysicsQuantum teleportationQuantum simulatorQuantum informationOne-way quantum computerQuantum algorithmRydberg formulaQuantum sensorQuantum logicQuantumCluster stateQuantum information scienceComputer scienceQuantum stateQuantum channelQuantum operationQuantum processTopology (electrical circuits)Rydberg stateDecoherence-free subspacesQuantum capacityW stateQuantum dynamicsFlexibility (engineering)Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein CondensatesQuantum Computing Algorithms and ArchitectureQuantum chaos and dynamical systems
Quantum simulation and computing with Rydberg-interacting qubits | Litcius