Arrays of identical neutral atoms trapped in optical tweezers are a promising candidate for use in quantum computing. These platforms are highly scalable to large numbers of qubits and neutral atoms boost several attractive features as long coherence times and the possibility to be entangled via strong dipole-dipole interactions by driving them to highly excited Rydberg states. The Thesis work is developed inside the framework of the QRydDemo project, whose aim in the next few years is to realize a neutral atom quantum processor with several hundred qubits. The smallest building blocks for the quantum computer are one and two-qubit gates: to entangle two atoms in the quantum register, a controlled-phase (CZ) gate will be implemented by shining fine-tuned laser pulses onto them. In this work, after giving a theoretical description of the Hamiltonian of two neutral atoms in the quantum register, a numerical simulation of this system is exploited to reproduce the behavior of the two-qubit CZ gate. Realistic effects are taken into account as finite temperature, imperfect Rydberg blockade, or decay out of the Rydberg state. A protocol with constant pulses is analyzed and its optimal parameters are found through classical optimizers. Then, time-dependent pulses are introduced and the optimal pulses are found through the optimal control algorithm dCRAB in an open-loop optimization. For the experimental realization of the gate, this analysis is of pivotal importance to know in which aspect more effort has to be put to maximize the experimental precision of the operation and thus improving the performance of the whole device

Optimal quantum gates for Rydberg atoms quantum computer

Pagano, Alice
2021/2022

Abstract

Arrays of identical neutral atoms trapped in optical tweezers are a promising candidate for use in quantum computing. These platforms are highly scalable to large numbers of qubits and neutral atoms boost several attractive features as long coherence times and the possibility to be entangled via strong dipole-dipole interactions by driving them to highly excited Rydberg states. The Thesis work is developed inside the framework of the QRydDemo project, whose aim in the next few years is to realize a neutral atom quantum processor with several hundred qubits. The smallest building blocks for the quantum computer are one and two-qubit gates: to entangle two atoms in the quantum register, a controlled-phase (CZ) gate will be implemented by shining fine-tuned laser pulses onto them. In this work, after giving a theoretical description of the Hamiltonian of two neutral atoms in the quantum register, a numerical simulation of this system is exploited to reproduce the behavior of the two-qubit CZ gate. Realistic effects are taken into account as finite temperature, imperfect Rydberg blockade, or decay out of the Rydberg state. A protocol with constant pulses is analyzed and its optimal parameters are found through classical optimizers. Then, time-dependent pulses are introduced and the optimal pulses are found through the optimal control algorithm dCRAB in an open-loop optimization. For the experimental realization of the gate, this analysis is of pivotal importance to know in which aspect more effort has to be put to maximize the experimental precision of the operation and thus improving the performance of the whole device
2021-09
84
Quantum computer, Quantum gate, Rydberg atoms, Optimal control, Quantum hardware
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/28751