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Realizing Distance-Selective Interactions in a Rydberg-Dressed Atom Array.

Simon Hollerith, K. Srakaew, David Wei, Antonio Rubio-Abadal, D. Adler, P. Weckesser, Andreas Kruckenhauser, V. Walther, R. van Bijnen, Jun Rui, C. Gross, I. Bloch, J. Zeiher·October 19, 2021·DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.128.113602
MedicinePhysics

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Abstract

Measurement-based quantum computing relies on the rapid creation of large-scale entanglement in a register of stable qubits. Atomic arrays are well suited to store quantum information, and entanglement can be created using highly-excited Rydberg states. Typically, isolating pairs during gate operation is difficult because Rydberg interactions feature long tails at large distances. Here, we engineer distance-selective interactions that are strongly peaked in distance through off-resonant laser coupling of molecular potentials between Rydberg atom pairs. Employing quantum gas microscopy, we verify the dressed interactions by observing correlated phase evolution using many-body Ramsey interferometry. We identify atom loss and coupling to continuum modes as a limitation of our present scheme and outline paths to mitigate these effects, paving the way towards the creation of large-scale entanglement.

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