Holonomic quantum computing in symmetry-protected ground states of spin chains

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Abstract

While solid-state devices offer naturally reliable hardware for modern classical computers, thus far quantum information processors resemble vacuum tube computers in being neither reliable nor scalable. Strongly correlated many body states stabilized in topologically ordered matter offer the possibility of naturally fault tolerant computing, but are both challenging to engineer and coherently control and cannot be easily adapted to different physical platforms. We propose an architecture which achieves some of the robustness properties of topological models but with a drastically simpler construction. Quantum information is stored in the symmetry-protected degenerate ground states of spin-1 chains, while quantum gates are performed by adiabatic non-Abelian holonomies using only single-site fields and nearest-neighbor couplings. Gate operations respect the symmetry, and so inherit some protection from noise and disorder from the symmetry-protected ground states. © IOP Publishing and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.

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Renes, J. M., Miyake, A., Brennen, G. K., & Bartlett, S. D. (2013). Holonomic quantum computing in symmetry-protected ground states of spin chains. New Journal of Physics, 15. https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/15/2/025020

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