A number of experiments provide evidence supporting the existence of topological phases of matter with non-Abelian anyonic quasiparticles. Ising-type σ non Abelian anyons occur as quasiparticles in a number of quantum Hall states that are strong candidates for describing experimentally observed quantum Hall plateaus in the second Landau level, most notably for the v=5/2 plateau, which has experimental evidence favoring a non-Abelian state. Ising anyons also describe the Majorana fermion zero modes (MZMs) which exist in vortex cores of two-dimensional (2D) chiral p-wave superfluids and superconductors, at the ends of Majorana nanowires (one-dimensional spinless, p-wave superconductors), and quasiparticles in various proposed superconductor heterostructures. Recent experiments in superconductor/semiconductor nanowire heterostructure systems have found evidence of MZMs and hence realization of Majorana.
Non-Abelian anyonic quasiparticles may be used to provide topologically protected qubits and quantum information processing. Schemes for implementing fusion, (braiding) exchange operations, and topological charge measurements of non-Abelian quasiparticles have previously been disclosed.
In systems with Ising-type anyons/MZMs, quasiparticle exchange and topological charge measurement allow these systems to be used for topological quantum information processing. Braiding and measurement in these systems allow the topologically protected generation of the Clifford gates, which is not a computationally universal gate set. To make these systems universal quantum computers, it is sufficient to supplement the gate set with a “θ/2-phase gate”, R(θ)=diag[1, eiθ] (where diag[1, eiθ] represents a 2×2 matrix in which off diagonal elements are zero (r12=r21=0) and elements r11=1 and r22=eiθ) (in some instances, R(θ) may be written as R(θ)), with θ≠nπ/2(for η an integer). A particularly propitious choice for this is to use the π/8-phase gate, T=R(π/4), which can be generated if one has a supply of prepared or “magic states,” such as
This is an advantageous choice because it is known how to “distill” magic states, i.e. produce a higher fidelity state from several noisy copies of the state, using only Clifford operations, for a remarkably high error threshold of approximately 0.14 for the noisy states.
The detailed description is described with reference to the accompanying figures. In the figures, the left-most digit(s) of a reference number identifies the figure in which the reference number first appears. The same reference numbers in different figures indicate similar or identical items.
A useful, but, thus far, overlooked topologically protected computational operation (which is disclosed herein) is the fusion of two (or more) topological qubits. “Topological qubit fusion” is an operation acting on two (or more) topological qubits that results in one fewer topological qubit and a new state for the remaining qubit(s). This operation is performed by fusing a number of the anyonic quasiparticles which comprise these qubits, measuring the resulting fusion outcomes, and fusing these resulting fusion outcomes with other quasiparticles that comprised the qubits. (This will be explained in more detail.) Quasiparticle fusion operations and measurement operations have not been previously utilized to produce the topological qubit fusion operation discussed herein. It is important to be able to measure the anyonic fusion outcomes in order to avoid producing mixed states, i.e. introducing decoherence in the resulting states, when performing this operation.
While fusion of MZMs has been discussed in the context of Majorana wires, a method of trapping and measuring the fusion outcome (I or Ψ) when fusing two segments of Majorana wires into one segment has not previously been proposed. Also described herein is a proposal for doing so by: (1) trapping the fusion outcome in a “wire well;” (2) observing whether or not the well is occupied (by a Ψ excitation) through local measurements; and (3) fusing any resulting trapped Ψ excitation with a MZM by either (a) adiabatically moving the well to a prescribed end of the resulting wire segment or (b) adiabatically moving a prescribed end of the wire to the well.
As an illustration of the utility of the topological qubit fusion operation, a novel protocol is described using topological qubit fusion for implementing a 0/2-phase gate, R(0), on a topological qubit comprised of MZMs/Ising σ quasiparticles, given an ancillary topological qubit in the state |Bθcos(θ/2) |0−i sin(θ/2)|1).
Previously disclosed proposals for generating a π/8-phase gate from a magic state (or, more generally, a θ/2-phase gate from a state such as 51β0employed the use of entangling gates (such as CNOT gates) and/or non-demolitional entangling two qubit measurements (such as parity measurements). The protocol discussed herein for converting Bθ states into θ/2 -phase gates using topological qubit fusion has the advantage that it is natural in the anyonic context and does not require performing any entangling gate operations nor non-demolitional entangling two-qubit measurements, which require more difficult interferometric measurements of the collective topological charge of four (or more) quasiparticles, which may be difficult operations to produce (with error protection).
Using MZMs/Ising-type quasiparticles, as one non-limiting example, a topological qubit 100 in the “standard encoding” is comprised of four MZMs/Ising σ quasiparticles 102-108, whose collective topological charge is trivial (i.e., even fermion parity/vacuum topological charge I), as shown in
A fusion tree for the |0 basis state and the |1 state of the qubit 100 is illustrated in
Referring to
The topological system 110 may also include an array of gates 116. The array of gates 116 may provide, among other things, electrical potential or a magnetic field. In this manner, the array of gates 116 may induce the nanowires 114 to change between topological phase and nontopological, normal or “trivial” phase, and vice-versa.
The topological system 110 may also include a measuring device 118 such as an interferometer that may measure quasiparticles. For example, the measuring device 118 may measure fusion outcomes to determine whether the fusion outcomes are I or Ψ fusion outcomes.
The processes and systems described herein may be implemented in a number of ways. Example implementations are provided below with reference to the following figures.
Topological Qubit Fusion may be generally described to be an operation acting on two (or more) topological qubits that results in one fewer topological qubit and a new state for the remaining qubit(s). This operation is performed by fusing a number of the anyonic quasiparticles which comprise these qubits, measuring the resulting fusion outcomes, and fusing these resulting fusion outcomes with other quasiparticles that comprised the qubits.
The resulting operation, i.e., the map from the initial state to the final state, will generally depend on the type of anyonic quasiparticles being used and the choice of which quasiparticles are fused. To describe this in more detail, consider, as one concrete but non-limiting example, Ising-type anyons (or MZMs). Start with two topological qubits (in the standard encoding): |ΨA=α0|0×α1|1 and |ΨB=β0|0+β1|1, and perform the topological qubit fusion operation shown in
At time tO, qubit A is comprised of quasiparticles A1, A2, A3, and A4, and qubit B is comprised of quasiparticles B1, B2, B3, and B4.
At time t1, quasiparticles A1 and B1 are fused, resulting in the quasiparticle x (which can be either I or Ψ), and quasiparticles A2 and B4 are fused, resulting in quasiparticle y (which can be either I or Ψ). The topological charge values 1 or Ψ of quasiparticles x and y are measured. Then at time t2, quasiparticle x is fused with quasiparticle B2, which results in a a quasiparticle and is the new quasiparticle 1 of the final topological qubit, and quasiparticle y is fused with quasiparticle B3, which results in a σ quasiparticle and is the new quasiparticle 2 of the final topological qubit. Nxy is defined to equal 0 when xy =I and equal 1 when xy =Ψ (i.e. it is the fermion parity of the fusion outcomes). Then this topological qubit fusion operation is given by
This result was obtained using the F-moves and bubble contractions depicted in
One can fuse the quasiparticles in a different manner to produce different topological qubit fusion operations. For example, if one were to fuse quasiparticle A2 of qubit A with quasiparticle B1 of qubit B to give x which is subsequently fused with quasiparticle B2 of qubit B, and also fuse quasiparticle A3 of qubit A with quasiparticle B4 of qubit B to give y which is subsequently fused with quasiparticle B3 of qubit B, the operation would be
It is straightforward to check that the topological qubit fusion operations for Ising-type quasiparticles described in the previous section can be used to generate unitary operator acting on one of the qubits through a judicious choice of the other qubit. In particular, assume |ΨB=|Bθ (as previously defined), then the first topological qubit fusion procedure (shown in
(the last equality is up to an unimportant overall phase factor). Thus, topological qubit fusion can be used with states |Bθ in this manner to generate the θ/2-phase gates, R(θ) on another qubit. If NXxy=0, this immediately follows from the above. If Nxy=1, then this will generate the conjugate θ/2-phase gates. This poses no problem, as long as one knows the values of x and y, one can make subsequently alterations to the quantum computation to correct for the difference. For example, if one is using magic states to generate Ψ/8-phase gates, R(Ψ/4), and has Nxy=1, then the resulting R(−Ψ/4) gate can be followed by a R(Ψ/2) phase gate, which is a Clifford gate that can be obtained by braiding σ quasiparticles.
Majorana wires are regions within semiconductor wires with strong spin-orbit coupling in which proximity to an s-wave superconductor has induced an effective p-wave pairing of electrons with gap δ0. The fundamental inequality that dictates which regions of the wire are in the topological (Majorana) phase states:
All quantities in the above formula can be spatially adjusted with local electric or magnetic fields and are therefore amenable to (time-dependent) gating and control.
Using either electrical or magnetic gating or both, two segments of a wire in the topological regime may be extended until they join into a single segment. As the segments join, the fusion rules of the Ising tensor category governing the long-range physics allow two distinct fusion outcomes: σσ=I⊕Ψ, where I is the trivial/vacuum quasiparticle and Ψ is a fermion. To avoid decoherence, it is necessary to measure which outcome occurs upon fusion and, if the outcome is Ψ, to control (or at least know) what happens to the resulting Ψ quasiparticle. A Ψ outcome will be trapped by a potential well, which is created, for example, by a kink in the chemical potential μ.
Fortunately, Ψ is an excitation above the ground state and, for typical system parameters, will have an additional energy of order of 10 meV. With careful calibration the control gate potentials required to fuse two topological segments of a given wire will be bimodal and can be used to read out the fusion outcome: I (lower energy) or Ψ (higher energy).
The topological segments are fused as a result of changing parameters Vx, μ, and/or δ0. It is possible to control these parameters in such a way that a spatially localized potential well is formed at and shortly after the moment of fusion. This well will trap the fusion outcome (which is only relevant if the outcome happens to be Ψ). This is particularly obvious if fusion occurs via gating which increases μ while leaving the other parameters substantially constant; μ will be lower, initially in the region where fusion is incipient. Item (1) of the Overview section amounts to controlling gating to maintain this well and hence the localization of any fusion outcome Ψ.
Finally, by sequentially adjusting gates along the wire, as in playing a scale on the piano, the well may be migrated adiabatically to either the left or the right end of the newly formed, unified topological segment of wire. Alternatively, the gates along the wire may be adjusted to adiabatically translate one of the endpoints of the wire to the well. When the well and desired endpoint become close to each other (i.e., within a few coherence lengths), the Ψ quasiparticle, if present, will fuse with the σ quasiparticle localized at the Majorana wire endpoint (lowering the system energy back to the ground state).
The nanowire 700 is tuned such that proximal ends of the topological regions 702 and 704 extend towards each other to form a single topological region 712. The potential well 710 traps the fusion outcome Ψ (or I).
The nanowire 700 is further tuned such that the potential well 710 is adiabatically moved toward an end of the topological region 712, where a a particle is localized. As the potential well 710 is brought into proximity of the end of the topological region 712, the fusion outcome Ψ tunnels through the potential barrier and the fusion outcome Ψ fuses with the it quasiparticle.
The fusion of topological segments may be effectively described in terms of the Majorana operators located near the ends of each topological segment. (See,
The fermion Ψ(x)=γ3(x)+iγ4 (x) is not spatially localized and has an interaction with γ1 and γ2 of the form Ψγ1|iΨγ2. Ψ will be concentrated near the (normal state) Fermi surface and may be written as Ψ=ΨkF.
After fusion the system Hamiltonian will take an effective form
H=it13γ1γ3+it 42γ4γ2+it34γ3γ4 where all tij are real.
A non-limiting implementation of the topological qubit fusion protocol shown in
This achieves the θ/2-phase gate R(θ) if Nxy=0 or the conjugate −θ/2 phase gate R(−θ) if Nxy =1. If using θ=Ψ/4, a subsequent braiding operation can be applied to convert R(−Ψ/4) to R(Ψ/4), if necessary.
Although the techniques have been described in language specific to structural features and/or methodological acts, it is to be understood that the appended claims are not necessarily limited to the specific features or acts described. Rather, the specific features and acts are disclosed as exemplary forms of implementing such techniques.
The various embodiments described above can be combined to provide further embodiments.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED PATENT APPLICATIONS This application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/957,268, filed Aug. 1, 2013, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/761,125, filed Feb. 5, 2013. Both applications are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61761125 | Feb 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13957268 | Aug 2013 | US |
Child | 15632109 | US |