
The breakthrough dramatically accelerates entangling operations while preserving high fidelity, removing a key bottleneck for near‑term quantum processors and error‑corrected architectures.
Hybrid atom‑molecule arrays address a long‑standing obstacle in quantum technology: the slow, error‑prone manipulation of polar‑molecule qubits. Molecules offer rich internal states ideal for dense information storage, yet their weak dipole interactions and limited detection have hampered scalable implementations. By integrating well‑controlled neutral‑atom Rydberg qubits as ancillae, the new scheme leverages the mature atomic toolbox—fast laser control, high‑efficiency measurement, and strong, tunable interactions—while preserving the molecule's multi‑level advantages. This division of labor creates a synergistic platform where each component operates in its optimal regime.
The core innovation is a resonant dipole‑dipole exchange that couples a molecular rotational transition directly to an atomic Rydberg transition. This interaction produces a controlled‑phase gate with an entangling rate of ~1 MHz, a three‑order‑of‑magnitude improvement over direct molecule‑molecule gates. Detailed error budgeting shows total gate infidelity around 10⁻³, with contributions from Rydberg decay (7×10⁻⁴), adiabaticity breakdown (2.5×10⁻⁴), and electric‑field noise (8×10⁻⁵). The gate’s speed and precision enable mid‑circuit measurements via atomic ancillae, facilitating non‑destructive readout of molecular states and allowing entanglement of non‑adjacent qubits—capabilities essential for quantum error correction and complex state synthesis.
Beyond raw performance, the hybrid architecture opens pathways to advanced quantum information protocols. The ability to prepare multipartite GHZ states and encode information in qutrits supports measurement‑based topological codes such as the Z₃ Toric code, moving toward fault‑tolerant, non‑abelian quantum computation. Because the mechanism relies on generic dipole moments and Rydberg scaling, it is compatible with a wide range of polar molecules, making it attractive for both academic labs and emerging quantum‑hardware firms. As the field seeks scalable, high‑fidelity platforms, this atom‑molecule synergy could become a cornerstone of next‑generation quantum processors.
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