Error-protected quantum bits entangled for the first time

Error protected quantum bits entangled
Quantum particles lined up in a lattice form the basis for an error-tolerant quantum processor. Credit: Uni Innsbruck/Harald Ritsch

For the first time, physicists from the University of Innsbruck have entangled two quantum bits distributed over several quantum objects and successfully transmitted their quantum properties. This marks an important milestone in the development of fault-tolerant quantum computers. The researchers published their report in Nature.

Even computers can miscalculate; small disturbances change stored information and corrupt results. So computers use methods to continuously correct such errors. In quantum computers, the vulnerability to errors can be reduced by storing in more than a single quantum particle. These logical quantum bits are less sensitive to errors. In recent years, theorists have developed many different error correction codes and optimized them for different tasks.

"The most promising codes in are those defined on a two-dimensional lattice," explains Thomas Monz from the Department of Experimental Physics at the University of Innsbruck. "This is due to the fact that the physical structure of current quantum computers can be very well mapped through such lattices." With the help of the codes, logical quantum bits can be distributed over several . The quantum physicists from Innsbruck have now succeeded for the first time in entangling two quantum bits coded in this way. The entanglement of two quantum bits is an important resource of quantum computers, giving them a performance advantage over classical computers.

A kind of quantum sewing machine

For their experiment, the physicists use an ion-trap quantum with ten ions. Into these ions the logical are encoded. Using a technique that scientists refer to as 'lattice surgery,' two logical qubits encoded on a lattice can be 'stitched together.'

"A new, larger is created from the qubits stitched together in this way," explains Alexander Erhard from the Innsbruck team. In turn, a large logical qubit can be separated into two individual logical qubits by lattice surgery. In contrast to the standard operations between two logical qubits, lattice surgery only requires operations along the boundary of the encoded qubits, not on their entire surface. "This reduces the number of operations required to create entanglement between two encoded qubits," explain the theoretical physicists Nicolai Friis and Hendrik Poulsen Nautrup.

Key technology for fault tolerant quantum computers

Lattice surgery is considered one of the key techniques for the operation of future fault-tolerant quantum computers. Using lattice surgery, the physicists led by Thomas Monz and Rainer Blatt, together with the theoretical physicists Hendrik Poulsen Nautrup and Hans Briegel from the Department of Theoretical Physics at the University of Innsbruck and Nicolai Friis from the Institute of Quantum Optics and Quantum Information (IQOQI) of the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna, have now demonstrated the generation of entanglement between two encoded qubits. This is the first experimental realization of non-classical correlations between topologically encoded qubits. Furthermore, the researchers were able to demonstrate for the first time the teleportation of quantum states between two encoded qubits.

More information: Entangling logical qubits with lattice surgery, Nature (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-03079-6

Journal information: Nature

Citation: Error-protected quantum bits entangled for the first time (2021, January 13) retrieved 2 February 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2021-01-error-protected-quantum-bits-entangled.html
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