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Topological order from measurements and feed-forward on a trapped ion quantum computer

Mohsin Iqbal, Nathanan Tantivasadakarn, T. Gatterman, J. Gerber, K. Gilmore, D. Gresh, A. Hankin, N. Hewitt, C. V. Horst, M. Matheny, T. Mengle, B. Neyenhuis, A. Vishwanath, M. Foss-Feig, R. Verresen, Henrik Dreyer·February 3, 2023·DOI: 10.1038/s42005-024-01698-3
Physics

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Abstract

Quantum systems evolve in time in one of two ways: through the Schrödinger equation or wavefunction collapse. So far, deterministic control of quantum many-body systems in the lab has focused on the former, due to the probabilistic nature of measurements. This imposes serious limitations: preparing long-range entangled states, for example, requires extensive circuit depth if restricted to unitary dynamics. In this work, we use mid-circuit measurement and feed-forward to implement deterministic non-unitary dynamics on Quantinuum’s H1 programmable ion-trap quantum computer. Enabled by these capabilities, we demonstrate a constant-depth procedure for creating a toric code ground state in real-time. In addition to reaching high stabilizer fidelities, we create a non-Abelian defect whose presence is confirmed by transmuting anyons via braiding. This work clears the way towards creating complex topological orders in the lab and exploring deterministic non-unitary dynamics via measurement and feed-forward. Topological quantum states are essential resources in quantum error correction and quantum simulation but unitary quantum circuits for their preparation require extensive circuit depth. The authors demonstrate a constant-depth protocol to prepare topologically ordered states on a trapped-ion quantum computer using non-unitary operations.

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