Hardware-Efficient Mølmer-Sørensen Gate Achieves Competitive Fidelity on Superconducting Quantum Computers

Expanding the Gate Set for NISQ Architectures

The successful implementation and comprehensive benchmarking of the Mølmer-Sørensen (MS) entangling gate on a superconducting quantum processor represents a significant advancement in the engineering of quantum hardware. On IBM Quantum’s hardware, the MS gate, a fundamental operation typically used in trapped-ion systems, attained a process fidelity of 92.47%. This performance is extremely competitive when compared to the 93.02% native controlled-NOT (CX) gate fidelity of the device.

This accomplishment shows that hardware-aware compilation can optimize non-native entangling gates to function similarly to natively implemented processor architectural processes. Because the discoveries increase the effective set of gates accessible for algorithm design on fixed-architecture processors, they are essential for the advancement of Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum (NISQ) computing.

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The Mølmer-Sørensen Gate (MS) gate: A New Tool for Superconductors

The Mølmer-Sørensen (MS) gate is a fundamental and widely used entangling quantum logic gate in trapped-ion quantum computing.

Function: The function of this high-fidelity entangling gate is to produce an Ising-like interaction between the qubits, namely a R XX rotation on two qubits. Since it is a universal gate, any quantum circuit may be constructed using it in conjunction with single-qubit rotations.

Physical System: Trapped-ion quantum computers are the main application for it.

Mechanism: The ions are exposed to a bichromatic laser field, which consists of two laser tones. This field connects the ions’ common collective mechanical motion (vibrational modes or “phonons”) to their internal electronic states (the qubits). The collective motion serves as a temporary bus for the quantum information to interact, but the gate is made to divorce the motion from the qubits at the end of the operation, restoring the motional state to its initial state.

Key Advantage: One of its main advantages is that it is resilient to the ions’ initial motional condition. An important practical benefit over previous gate systems is that it does not require the ions to be fully cooled to their motional ground state.

Scalability: A key component of scalability is the capacity to entangle many qubits simultaneously (all-to-all connection) using a global MS gate applied to a whole chain of trapped ions.

The capacity to perform high-fidelity two-qubit entangling gates, which are essential for generating the entangled states needed for quantum advantage, is at the heart of quantum computation. However, the physical platform frequently limits the selection of two-qubit gates.

For entanglement, superconducting quantum processors, like IBM’s, usually use the controlled-Z (CZ) or CNOT gate. On the other hand, trapped-ion quantum computing is where the MS gate first appeared. In order to function reliably even when it is not subjected to the stringent thermal ground state criteria of previous approaches, it was designed to get around experimental challenges such as sensitivity to thermal mobility. The MS gate emerged as a strong contender for cross-platform translation because of its demonstrated usefulness and theoretical stability in trapped-ion systems.

The effective compilation of non-native gates across many platforms is a crucial challenge for quantum compiler optimization as the quantum sector shifts towards hardware-agnostic programming.

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Hardware-Efficient Implementation and Characterization

Researchers created a compilation approach that maps the MS gate’s abstract unitary onto the native gate set of the physical device in order to successfully adapt it to the superconducting environment. In order to reduce the buildup of faults, the implementation was especially made to be “hardware-efficient,” minimizing circuit depth. A decomposition that only needs one CNOT gate was produced as a result of this optimization. As a maximally entangling operation, the MS gate is locally equivalent to the CNOT gate but has unique algebraic characteristics that may be useful for particular algorithms.

A thorough dual-methodology approach was used to characterize the gate’s performance: complete Quantum Process Tomography (QPT) and direct state measurements.

Direct State Measurements: These confirmed that the operation was logically accurate for a particular input. The gate should ideally prepare a Bell state when applied to the initial state (the “00” state). By attaining a high empirical success probability of 94.2% within the correct two-dimensional Bell state subspace, execution on the physical hardware validated its functionality. The main cause of the 5.8% observed mistake, or state preparation infidelity, was population leakage into false states.

Quantum Process Tomography (QPT): This offered a thorough benchmark of overall gate quality by reconstructing the entire process matrix and providing a thorough characterization. With a process fidelity of 96.86%, the QPT validated the constructed circuit’s mathematical accuracy in simulation.

Benchmarking and Operational Robustness

The main discovery is that the ibm_nairobi superconducting processor obtained a high experimental fidelity of 92.47%. This number shows a successful, virtually parity implementation and is directly similar to the device’s native CX gate’s fidelity of 93.02%. The inevitable impacts of device-specific noise, like decoherence and control mistakes, are quantified by the fidelity drop of roughly 4.4 percentage points between the hardware execution and the noiseless simulation.

Importantly, even if the underlying hardware changed over the studies, the MS gate kept this competitive fidelity. The apparatus demonstrated readout errors ranging from 1.8% to 9.9% for various qubits and T1 coherence periods varying from 63 to 144 microseconds. The MS gate is established as a feasible and reliable high-performance entangling primitive due to its consistent performance under non-ideal, heterogeneous situations.

Future Compiler Designs and Algorithmic Flexibility

The Mølmer-Sørensen gate’s effective adaptation with a low fidelity penalty has important ramifications for compiler optimization and quantum algorithm design in the future.

This study effectively extends the practical gate set for superconducting designs by proving high-fidelity substitutes for the native gate. This gives algorithm designers more options because different gates have varied algebraic features and entanglement structures that can be more appropriate for optimizing particular algorithmic primitives, quantum simulations, or error mitigation strategies.

Future quantum compiler designs shouldn’t be restricted to a fixed native gate set, according to the research. To obtain more optimal circuit decompositions and hardware-specific advantages in the crucial NISQ era, compilers should instead take advantage of a wider class of efficiently compilable unitaries and utilize them as prospective primitives.

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