Physical Review Research (Jan 2024)
Error-robust quantum signal processing using Rydberg atoms
Abstract
Rydberg atom arrays have recently emerged as one of the most promising platforms for quantum simulation and quantum information processing. However, as is the case for other experimental platforms, the longer-term success of the Rydberg atom arrays in implementing quantum algorithms depends crucially on their robustness to gate-induced errors. Here we show that, for an idealized biased-error model based on Rydberg atom dynamics, the implementation of quantum signal processing (QSP) protocols can be made error robust, in the sense that the asymptotic scaling of the gate-induced error probability is slower than that of gate complexity. Moreover, our numerical results that use experimentally accessible parameters indicate that QSP iterates made out of more than 100 gates can be implemented with constant error probability. To showcase our approach, we provide a concrete blueprint to implement QSP-based near-optimal Hamiltonian simulation on the Rydberg atom platform. The proposed protocol substantially improves both the scaling and the overhead of gate-induced errors in comparison to those protocols that implement a fourth-order product formula.