Abstracts

Halving ion-trap two-qubit gate time while enhancing frequency-drift robustness

Presenting Author: Eduardo J. Paez, University of Calgary
Contributing Author(s): Seyed Shakib Vedaie Barry C. Sanders

Two-qubit gate performance is vital for scaling up ion-trap quantum computing, and reducing gate time $\tau$ and gate error rate is achieved by quantum-control methods. We develop a full model for two-qubit gates effected in a Paul trap with multiple ions, described by a master equation incorporating the single-ion quadrupolar effective Rabi frequency, an Autler-Townes shift, off-resonant transitions, Raman and Rayleigh scattering, laser-power fluctuations, motional heating, cross-Kerr phonon coupling and laser spillover with no fitting parameters whatsoever. To minimize $\tau$, while maintaining fixed gate fidelity, we articulate and solve the feasibility problem: given the seven-ion master equation with all ions prepared in the ground state and given vibrational modes initially in a ~$\mu$K thermal state, and with the target being two of the ions evolving over time $\tau$ into a Bell state, and subject to a strict upper bound on laser power, design an amplitude-modulated Raman laser pulse that deterministically yields a close approximation to this Bell state. We solve our problem by global optimization and obtain a pulse sequence for achieving a two-qubit gate in seven trapped ${171}^Yb^{+}$ ions; our pulse executes in half the time required by state-of-the-art methods while not acquiring any further gate error, and our pulse is robust against long-term drift in the frequency detuning and an imperfect initial motional ground state.

(Session 5 : Thursday from 12:00pm-2:00 pm)

 

SQuInT Chief Organizer
Akimasa Miyake, Associate Professor
amiyake@unm.edu

SQuInT Co-Organizer
Brian Smith, Associate Professor
bjsmith@uoregon.edu

SQuInT Local Organizers
Philip Blocher, Postdoc
Pablo Poggi, Research Assistant Professor
Tzula Propp, Postdoc
Jun Takahashi, Postdoc
Cunlu Zhou, Postdoc

SQuInT Founder
Ivan Deutsch, Regents' Professor, CQuIC Director
ideutsch@unm.edu

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