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Superconducting Qubits
Preparation of Fractional Quantum Hall States on Quantum Computers
arXiv
Authors: Hao Wu, Lei-Yi-Nan Liu, Zhao-Xin Pei, Yi-Xuan Zhai, Zhen-Xu Luo, Zhao Liu, Jian Cui
Year
2026
Paper ID
69516
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
174
Citations
N/A
Abstract
The realization of fractional quantum Hall (FQH) states, characterized by fractional charge and intrinsic topological order, on quantum computers represents a central challenge at the interface of condensed matter physics and quantum information science. Current methods are grouped into two types: methods based on (quasi-)adiabatic evolution of complex parent Hamiltonians to yield target states, and circuit-based approaches for direct state preparation, which are confined to effectively one-dimensional systems near the thin cylinder or torus limit. We introduce a complementary scheme relying on direct quantum circuit construction, which works for arbitrary geometries. Specifically, we present a method to precisely prepare the ν=1/3 Laughlin state on the sphere geometry and demonstrate that it significantly reduces the required number of two-qubit gates and circuit depth, compared to variational quantum circuit approaches. In addition, we employ optimal control techniques to design control pulses for both superconducting and Rydberg atom platforms, identifying experimentally feasible protocols for state preparation. Our results provide an efficient and hardware-relevant pathway for realizing generic FQH states on both noisy intermediate-scale and fault-tolerant quantum devices.
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- This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- The realization of fractional quantum Hall (FQH) states, characterized by fractional charge and intrinsic topological order, on quantum computers represents a central challenge...
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