Resonant Microwave Mediated Interactions Between Distant Electron Spins

ORAL

Abstract

The ability to transfer quantum states and generate entanglement over distances much larger than qubit length scales is an important step towards maximal parallelism and the implementation of two-qubit gates on arbitrary pairs of qubits. Extending qubit interactions beyond the nearest neighbor is particularly beneficial for spin-based quantum computing architectures, which are limited by short-range exchange interactions. Experimental progress towards achieving long-range spin-spin coupling has so far been restricted to interactions between individual spins and microwave photons [1,2,3]. We demonstrate resonant microwave-mediated coupling between two electron spins that are physically separated by more than 4 mm [4]. Our results imply that microwave-frequency photons may be used as a resource to generate long-range two-qubit gates between spatially separated spins.

[1] Mi et al., Nature 555, 599 (2018)
[2] Samkharadze et al., Science 359, 1123 (2018)
[3] Landig et al., Nature 560, 179 (2018)
[4] Borjans et al., arXiv:1905.00776 (2019)

*Funded by Army Research Office grant W911NF-15-1-0149 and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation’s EPiQS Initiative through grant GBMF4535. Devices were fabricated in the Princeton University Quantum Device Nanofabrication Laboratory.

Presenters

  • Felix Borjans

    • Physics, Princeton University
    • Princeton University

Authors

  • Felix Borjans

    • Physics, Princeton University
    • Princeton University
  • Xanthe Croot

    • Physics, Princeton University
    • Princeton University
  • Xiao Mi

    • Google LLC
    • Physics, Princeton University
    • Princeton University
    • Google
  • Michael Gullans

    • Princeton University
  • Jason Petta

    • Physics, Princeton University
    • Princeton University
    • Department of Physics, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA