Quantum state change cannot occur instantly, but the speed of quantum evolution is limited to an upper bound value, called quantum speed limit (QSL). Understanding the quantum speed limit time (QSLT) is fundamental to advancing the control and optimization of quantum systems under decoherence. While significant progress has been made for single-qubit systems, the dynamics of two-qubit systems remain less explored. Studying the effects of dynamical decoupling (DD), such as periodic dynamical decoupling (PDD), on QSLT in two-qubit systems provides an opportunity to explore how to approach coherence preservation, entanglement stabilization, and environmental noise suppression. This exploration can lead to optimized strategies for controlling the evolution of two-qubit systems, which serve as the foundation of quantum gates and scalable quantum architectures. By analyzing QSLT in two-qubit systems, this research seeks to find how DD techniques can be adapted to mitigate the adverse effects of decoherence and extend their coherence times. The insights from this work will also shed light on the role of non-Markovian effects in two-qubit systems, offering potential pathways for leveraging such phenomena to maintain quantum coherence. The results reveal that under special conditions when decoupling pulses are applied to both qubits, the PDD method can completely remove all undesirable effects of the pure dephasing process. Eventually, these findings try to bridge the gap between theoretical frameworks and practical applications in quantum technologies, aiming to develop high-performance quantum processors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-93348-z | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
March 2025
Faculty of Physics, University of Isfahan, Hezar Jarib, P. O. Box 81746-73441, Isfahan, Iran.
Quantum state change cannot occur instantly, but the speed of quantum evolution is limited to an upper bound value, called quantum speed limit (QSL). Understanding the quantum speed limit time (QSLT) is fundamental to advancing the control and optimization of quantum systems under decoherence. While significant progress has been made for single-qubit systems, the dynamics of two-qubit systems remain less explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
February 2025
Clarendon Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Distributed quantum computing (DQC) combines the computing power of multiple networked quantum processing modules, ideally enabling the execution of large quantum circuits without compromising performance or qubit connectivity. Photonic networks are well suited as a versatile and reconfigurable interconnect layer for DQC; remote entanglement shared between matter qubits across the network enables all-to-all logical connectivity through quantum gate teleportation (QGT). For a scalable DQC architecture, the QGT implementation must be deterministic and repeatable; until now, no demonstration has satisfied these requirements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
January 2025
University of Strasbourg and CNRS, CESQ and ISIS (UMR 7006), aQCess, 67000, Strasbourg, France.
High-rate quantum error correcting (QEC) codes with moderate overheads in qubit number and control complexity are highly desirable for achieving fault-tolerant quantum computing. Recently, quantum error correction has experienced significant progress both in code development and experimental realizations, with neutral atom qubit architecture rapidly establishing itself as a leading platform in the field. Scalable quantum computing will require processing with QEC codes that have low qubit overhead and large error suppression, and while such codes do exist, they involve a degree of non-locality that has yet to be integrated into experimental platforms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEntropy (Basel)
December 2024
Joint Laboratory of Optics of Palacký University and Institute of Physics of AS CR, Faculty of Science, Palacký University, 17. listopadu 12, 779 00 Olomouc, Czech Republic.
We discuss a family of W-class states describing three-qubit systems. For such systems, we analyze the relations between the entanglement measures and the nonlocality parameter for a two-mode mixed state related to the two-qubit subsystem. We find the conditions determining the boundary values of the negativity, parameterized by concurrence, for violating the Bell-CHSH inequality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEntropy (Basel)
December 2024
Department of Physics, Federal University of Paraná, P.O. Box 19044, Curitiba 81531-980, PR, Brazil.
Correlations play a pivotal role in various fields of science, particularly in quantum mechanics, yet their proper quantification remains a subject of debate. In this work, we aimed to discuss the challenge of defining a reliable measure of total correlations. We first outlined the essential properties that an effective correlation measure should satisfy and reviewed existing measures, including quantum mutual information, the -norm of the correlation matrix, and the recently defined quantum Pearson correlation coefficient.
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