Quantum Brain
← Back to papers

Observing and braiding topological Majorana modes on programmable quantum simulators

N. Harle, O. Shtanko, R. Movassagh·March 28, 2022·DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-37725-0
PhysicsMedicine

AI Breakdown

Get a structured breakdown of this paper — what it's about, the core idea, and key takeaways for the field.

Abstract

Electrons are indivisible elementary particles, yet paradoxically a collection of them can act as a fraction of a single electron, exhibiting exotic and useful properties. One such collective excitation, known as a topological Majorana mode, is naturally stable against perturbations, such as unwanted local noise, and can thereby robustly store quantum information. As such, Majorana modes serve as the basic primitive of topological quantum computing, providing resilience to errors. However, their demonstration on quantum hardware has remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate a verifiable identification and braiding of topological Majorana modes using a superconducting quantum processor as a quantum simulator. By simulating fermions on a one-dimensional lattice subject to a periodic drive, we confirm the existence of Majorana modes localized at the edges, and distinguish them from other trivial modes. To simulate a basic logical operation of topological quantum computing known as braiding, we propose a non-adiabatic technique, whose implementation reveals correct braiding statistics in our experiments. This work could further be used to study topological models of matter using circuit-based simulations, and shows that long-sought quantum phenomena can be realized by anyone in cloud-run quantum simulations, whereby accelerating fundamental discoveries in quantum science and technology. Superconducting quantum simulators are promising platforms for simulations of quantum many-body systems. Here the authors simulate a periodically driven 1D quantum spin model hosting Majorana zero modes on a superconducting qubit processor and propose new protocols for their detection and braiding.

Related Research

Quantum Intelligence

Ask about quantum research, companies, or market developments.