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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:UW-Madison-Physics-Events
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SEQUENCE:5
UID:UW-Physics-Event-8476
DTSTART:20240125T213000Z
DTEND:20240125T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260413T223450Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231215T220011Z
LOCATION:Discovery Building\, DeLuca Forum
SUMMARY:Semiconductor qubits on the move: low power and high-fidelity 
 quantum gates\, Wisconsin Quantum Institute Colloquium\, Menno Veldhor
 st\, QuTech – Delft University of Technology
DESCRIPTION:<p>Loss and DiVincenzo proposed in 1998 that quantum dots 
 define excellent building blocks for a fault-tolerant quantum computer
 . By confining individual electrons in quantum dots\, qubits can be de
 fined on the electron spin states\, and controlled using electrical si
 gnals. Two decades of intensive research on spin qubits in quantum dot
 s has resulted in many proof-of-principle demonstrations. However\, a 
 realization of the original proposal remained elusive. In their propos
 al\, Loss and DiVincenzo envisaged that if the magnetic orientation va
 ries between quantum dots\, hopping an electron between the two quantu
 m dots would allow for fast and efficient qubit logic. Practically\, i
 t has remained too challenging to create such variations in the magnet
 ic orientation. Here\, we demonstrate that changes in the spin quantiz
 ation axis can be realized\, by making use of spin qubits in germanium
 . This is achieved by exploiting the strong spin-orbit interaction in 
 germanium\, which can cause orientations that differ by tens of degree
 s. In addition\, we establish hopping of an electron between two quant
 um dots\, where the spin remains coherent over effective length scales
  beyond a millimeter. This allows to realize qubit fidelities up to 99
 .97% and two-qubit gates of 99.3%. We then apply our findings to large
 r quantum circuits to explore pathways toward fault-tolerant quantum c
 omputation.</p>\n\n<p>This event starts at 3:30pm with refreshments\
 , followed at 3:45pm by a short presentation by Yinqi Chen (PhD studen
 t Maxim Vavilov group) titled "Voltage-Controlled Quantum Entanglement
  in Superconductor-Semiconductor Devices". The invited presentation st
 arts at 4pm.</p>
URL:https://www.physics.wisc.edu/events/?id=8476
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