High-fidelity collisional quantum gates with fermionic atoms
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Abstract
Quantum simulations of electronic structure and strongly correlated quantum phases are among the most promising applications of quantum computing. These computations benefit from native fermionic encodings 1,2 , enforcing fermionic statistics and conservation laws such as particle number and magnetization 3 independent of gate errors. While ultracold atoms in optical lattices have become established as powerful analogue simulators of strongly correlated fermionic matter 4–7 , neutral-atom platforms have concurrently emerged as versatile, scalable architectures for spin-based digital quantum computation 8 . Unifying these capabilities requires high-fidelity motionally coherent gates for fermionic atoms 9–11 , similar to collisional gates in bosonic systems 12,13 , paving the way for programmable fermionic quantum processors. Here we demonstrate collisional entangling gates with fidelities up to 99.75(6)% and Bell-state lifetimes exceeding 10 s, realized by means of controlled interactions of fermionic atoms in an optical superlattice. Using quantum gas microscopy 14 , we microscopically characterize spin-exchange and pair-tunnelling gates and realize a robust composite pair-exchange gate, a key building block for quantum chemistry simulations 3,15 . Our results establish controlled collisions in optical lattices as a competitive and complementary route to high entangling gate fidelities in neutral-atom quantum computers. Operating intrinsically with fermions, this capability naturally extends to many-qubit architectures, in which fermionic statistics become relevant, enabling complex state preparation and advanced readout 16–19 in scalable analogue–digital hybrid quantum simulators. Combined with local addressing 20,21 , these gates mark a crucial step towards a fully digital fermionic quantum computer based on controlled motion and entanglement of neutral atoms.