Nicholas Bronn
ACS Spring 2021
Quantum computation is conventionally performed using quantum operations acting on two-level quantum bits, or qubits. Qubits in modern quantum computers suffer from inevitable detrimental interactions with the environment that cause errors during computation, with multi-qubit operations often being a primary limitation. Most quantum devices naturally have multiple accessible energy levels beyond the lowest two traditionally used to define a qubit. Qudits offer a larger state space to store and process quantum information, reducing complexity of quantum circuits and improving efficiency of quantum algorithms. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a ternary decomposition of a multi-qubit operation on cloud-enabled fixed-frequency superconducting transmons. Specifically, we realize an order-preserving Toffoli gate consisting of four two-transmon operations, whereas the optimal order-preserving binary decomposition uses eight \texttt{CNOT}s on a linear transmon topology. Both decompositions are benchmarked via truth table fidelity where the ternary approach outperforms on most sets of transmons on \texttt{ibmq_jakarta}, and is further benchmarked via quantum process tomography on one set of transmons to achieve an average gate fidelity of 78.00% ± 1.93%.
Nicholas Bronn
ACS Spring 2021
Max Werninghaus, Daniel Egger, et al.
APS March Meeting 2021
Toshinari Itoko, Takashi Imamichi
QCE 2020
Devin Underwood, Jiri Stehlik, et al.
APS March Meeting 2021