Bosonic Encoding with Nanomechanical Resonators and Spins

ORAL

Abstract

Bosonic encoding architectures enable hardware-efficient quantum error correction schemes by encoding information in the bosonic modes of a high-quality factor harmonic oscillator. Previous implementations of such a scheme have relied on bulky mm-scale microwave and acoustic cavities, which limit their scalability. Here, we propose a platform consisting of nanomechanical resonators, which can have comparable quality factors to the mm-scale cavities previously used, but with a nearly two-orders of magnitude reduction in device footprint. We consider such a nanomechanical resonator coupled to an atomic-scale solid-state quantum emitter, which serves as the ancilla qubit and enables optical readout of the bosonic state. This architecture is benchmarked against commonly used bosonic encoding schemes to uncover its viability as a deployable quantum computing architecture.

*H.H.R. acknowledges support from NTT.E.G.A. acknowledges support from the Army Education Outreach Program postdoctoral fellowship.M.E.T. acknowledges support from the Institute of Soldier Nanotechnologies.D.R.E. acknowledges funding from the MITRE Corporation and the U.S. NSF Center for Ultracold Atoms.

Presenters

  • Hamza Hussain Raniwala

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Hamza Hussain Raniwala

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Ethan G Arnault

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Matthew Trusheim

    • Harvard University
    • Army Research Laboratory
  • Dirk R Englund

    • Columbia University
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • MIT