Published January – March 2025 | Version Published
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Benchmarking and Fidelity Response Theory of High-Fidelity Rydberg Entangling Gates

Abstract

The fidelity of entangling operations is a key figure of merit in quantum information processing, especially in the context of quantum error correction. High-fidelity entangling gates in neutral atoms have seen remarkable advancement recently. A full understanding of error sources and their respective contributions to gate infidelity will enable the prediction of fundamental limits on quantum gates in neutral atom platforms with realistic experimental constraints. In this work, we implement the time-optimal Rydberg controlled-Z (CZ) gate, design a circuit to benchmark its fidelity, and achieve a fidelity, averaged over symmetric input states, of 0.9971(5), downward corrected for leakage error, which together with our recent work [Nature 634, 321–327 (2024)] forms a new state of the art for neutral atoms. The remaining infidelity is explained by an error model, consistent with our experimental results over a range of gate speeds, with varying contributions from different error sources. Further, we develop a fidelity response theory to efficiently predict infidelity from laser noise with nontrivial power spectral densities and derive scaling laws of infidelity with gate speed. Besides its capability of predicting gate fidelity, we also utilize the fidelity response theory to compare and optimize gate protocols, to learn laser frequency noise, and to study the noise response for quantum simulation tasks. Finally, we predict that a CZ gate fidelity of ≳0.999 is feasible with realistic experimental upgrades. 

Copyright and License (English)

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article's title, journal citation, and DOI.

Acknowledgement (English)

We thank Kon Leung, Dariel Mok, Gyohei Nomura, Ingo Roth, Jeff Thompson, and Johannes Zeiher for fruitful discussions and their feedback on this work.

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Additional details

Funding

United States Department of Energy
DE-SC0021951
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
ONISQ program W911NF2010021
United States Army Research Office
MURI program W911NF2010136
National Science Foundation
QLCI program 2016245
Institute for Quantum Information and Matter
PHY-1733907
Technology Innovation Institute

Dates

Accepted
2025-01-28
Accepted
Available
2025-02-19
Published online

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Publication Status
Published