Collisional gates protected by quantum geometry and symmetry

Oral-In-person

Abstract

Neutral atoms in optical lattices have emerged as a leading quantum computing platform, with collisional gates offering a stable mechanism for quantum logic. However, previous experiments have treated ultracold collisions as a fine-tuned process governed by dynamics, rather than geometry. Here, we propose and experimentally demonstrate a purely geometric two-qubit swap gate by transiently populating qubit doublon states of fermionic atoms in a dynamical optical lattice. The presence of these doublon states, together with fermionic exchange anti-symmetry, enables a two-particle quantum holonomy—a geometric evolution where dynamical phases are absent. This yields a gate mechanism that is intrinsically protected against fluctuations and inhomogeneities of the confining potentials. The resilience of the gate is further reinforced by time-reversal and chiral symmetries of the Hamiltonian. We experimentally validate this exceptional protection, achieving a loss-corrected amplitude fidelity of 99.91(7)% measured across the entire system consisting of more than 17'000 atom pairs. When combined with recently developed topological pumping methods for atom transport, our results pave the way for large-scale, highly connected quantum processors. This work introduces a new paradigm for quantum logic, transforming fundamental symmetries and quantum statistics into a powerful resource for fault-tolerant computation.

Publication: arXiv:2507.22112v1
arXiv:2409.02984v3

Presenters

  • Konrad Viebahn

    • ETH Zurich

Authors

  • Konrad Viebahn

    • ETH Zurich
  • Yann Kiefer

    • ETH Zurich
  • Zijie Zhu

  • Lars Fischer

  • Marius Gächter

    • ETH Zurich
  • Giacomo Bisson

  • Samuel Jele

  • Tilman Esslinger