Quantum System Stability Under Perturbations

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Summary

Quantum system stability under perturbations refers to the ability of quantum computers and networks to keep their delicate states intact, even when faced with disruptions like noise or environmental changes. Because quantum systems are extremely sensitive, recent advances focus on finding ways to shield or correct these fragile states, making quantum technology more reliable for real-world use.

  • Explore protective structures: Consider using topological features like skyrmions or time-based patterns such as Fibonacci sequences to help your quantum information withstand outside interference.
  • Implement real-time feedback: Track and adjust quantum device parameters continuously to spot and correct for environmental drifts before they lead to errors or loss of stability.
  • Adopt distributed correction methods: Use strategies like beacon qubits and error conversion codes to identify and fix losses in quantum chains, helping maintain the integrity of large-scale quantum systems.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Keith King

    Former White House Lead Communications Engineer, U.S. Dept of State, and Joint Chiefs of Staff in the Pentagon. Veteran U.S. Navy, Top Secret/SCI Security Clearance. Over 16,000+ direct connections & 44,000+ followers.

    43,832 followers

    Quantum Armor: Topological Skyrmions Offer Robust Protection for Entangled States New Method Could Revolutionize Quantum Stability and Data Integrity One of the greatest challenges in quantum computing and communication is the extreme fragility of quantum entanglement. A small disturbance from the surrounding environment—be it stray photons or particles—can destroy entangled states and compromise quantum information. Now, researchers at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg have introduced a promising solution: using topological structures called skyrmions to “shield” quantum information, even in delicate entangled forms. Understanding the Breakthrough • The Problem: Noise Destroys Quantum States • Quantum entanglement enables particles to share states across any distance, a phenomenon Albert Einstein called “spooky action at a distance.” • However, entangled particles are notoriously sensitive. External noise—from temperature fluctuations to light interference—can easily collapse their quantum connection. • The Solution: Topological Encoding with Skyrmions • The research team proposes using quantum skyrmions—stable, swirling topological structures—as containers for quantum information. • Skyrmions have been observed in magnetic materials and quantum systems and are known for their durability and resistance to deformation. • Topology, the mathematical study of shapes and their preserved properties under continuous deformation, enables these structures to maintain coherence even in noisy environments. • How It Works • Quantum information is embedded within the skyrmion’s stable configuration, which resists environmental interference. • Because the information is stored in the topology rather than just the state of individual particles, it remains intact even as local disturbances occur. Why This Is a Game-Changer • Enhanced Quantum Stability • Encoding entangled information in topological skyrmions offers a potential path to longer-lasting, noise-resistant quantum systems. • This is especially critical for building scalable quantum computers and secure quantum communication networks. • A Step Toward Topological Quantum Computing • The findings align with broader research into topological quantum computing, a model that seeks to build fault-tolerant quantum systems based on topologically protected states. The Broader Impact This discovery represents a major advance in the field of quantum information science. By leveraging the inherent stability of topological skyrmions, researchers have introduced a new “quantum armor” that could make future quantum systems more reliable and practical. As quantum technologies continue to evolve, such protective methods will be essential for turning theory into real-world applications—from unbreakable encryption to ultra-powerful computation. The road to robust quantum systems just became clearer—and significantly more resilient.

  • View profile for Dimitrios A. Karras

    Assoc. Professor at National & Kapodistrian University of Athens (NKUA), School of Science, General Dept, Evripos Complex, adjunct prof. at EPOKA univ. Computer Engr. Dept., adjunct lecturer at GLA & Marwadi univ, India

    28,820 followers

    By driving a quantum processor with laser pulses arranged according to the Fibonacci sequence, physicists observed the emergence of an entirely new phase of matter—one that displays extraordinary stability in a domain where fragility is the norm. Quantum computers operate using qubits, which differ radically from classical bits. A qubit can exist in superposition, occupying multiple states at once, and can become entangled with others across space. These properties enable immense computational power, but they come with a cost: quantum states are notoriously short-lived. Environmental noise, microscopic imperfections, and edge effects rapidly degrade coherence, limiting how long quantum information can survive. Seeking a new way to protect fragile quantum states, scientists at the Flatiron Institute, instead of applying laser pulses at regular intervals, they used a rhythm governed by the Fibonacci sequence—an ordered but non-repeating pattern long known to appear in biological growth, crystal structures, and wave interference. The experiment was carried out on a chain of ten trapped-ion qubits, driven by precisely timed laser pulses. The result was the formation of what is described as a time quasicrystal. Unlike ordinary crystals, which repeat periodically in space, a time quasicrystal exhibits structure in time without repeating in a simple cycle. The Fibonacci-based driving created a temporal order that resisted disruption, allowing the quantum system to remain coherent far longer than expected. The improvement was significant. Under standard conditions, the quantum state persisted for roughly 1.5 seconds. When driven by the Fibonacci pulse sequence, coherence times stretched to approximately 5.5 seconds—more than a threefold increase. Even more intriguing was the system’s temporal behavior. Measurements indicated that the quantum dynamics unfolded as if time itself possessed two independent structural directions. This does not imply time flowing backward, but rather that the system’s evolution followed two intertwined temporal pathways—an emergent property arising purely from the Fibonacci drive. The researchers propose that the non-repeating structure of the Fibonacci sequence suppresses errors that typically accumulate at the boundaries of quantum systems. By distributing disturbances in a highly ordered yet aperiodic way, the sequence stabilizes the collective behavior of the qubits. In effect, a mathematical pattern found throughout nature acts as a self-organizing error-management protocol. The findings suggest a powerful new strategy for quantum control. Rather than fighting noise solely with complex correction algorithms, future quantum technologies may harness structured patterns—drawn from mathematics and natural order—to achieve resilience at a fundamental level. https://lnkd.in/dVxp7R8J https://lnkd.in/dDVNRsPk

  • View profile for Eviana Alice Breuss, MD, PhD

    Founder, President, and CEO @ Tengena LLC | Founder and President @ Avixela Inc | 2025 Top 30 Global Women Thought Leaders & Innovators

    8,236 followers

    DISSIPATIVE CONTINUOUS TIME CRYSTALS IN TENGENA's QUANTUM-SCALE PLATFORM The spontaneous breaking of continuous time-translational symmetry in open quantum systems represents a frontier in nonequilibrium physics with direct implications for quantum-scale architectures. Within Tengena’s platform, engineered to synthesize quantum transport, photonic control, and correlation-driven dynamics, the emergence of quantum continuous time crystals (qCTCs) offers a novel mechanism for persistent temporal coherence and signal routing without external modulation. Recent simulations of spin-1 lattices with finite-range interactions reveal two distinct qCTC phases: qCTC-I: A fluctuation-resilient phase consistent with classical limit-cycle dynamics but stabilized under quantum corrections. qCTC-II: A correlation-induced phase absent in mean-field theory, characterized by nontrivial scaling of quantum fluctuations and emergent oscillations in absence of long-range order. These phases are robust to local decay and perturbations, and critically, they do not rely on symmetry constraints in the master equation. The simulation also reveals a formation mechanism for continuous quantum time crystals: quantum correlations between particles, previously regarded as disruptive to time-crystalline order, are shown to play a stabilizing role. These correlations enable the emergence of persistent oscillations even in regimes where mean-field theory fails, underscoring the fundamentally non-classical nature of the observed phases. The system exhibits collective dynamics that cannot be reduced to single-particle behavior. The temporal ordering arises from many-body interactions that drive the system toward a self-organized oscillatory state. This marks a paradigm shift from externally controlled photonic or quantum logic routing to architectures based on intrinsic dynamical self-organization, aligning directly with Tengena’s vision for autonomous quantum subsystems. The qCTC-II phase is particularly aligned with Tengena’s goals in low-dissipation quantum signaling, as it forms an approximate dark state with minimal intermediate-state population. Oscillations are confined between |↓⟩ and |↑⟩ states, suppressing heating and decoherence—key for scalable quantum memory and photonic switching. The model maps directly onto neutral-atom arrays, with Rabi frequencies (~13 MHz) and dipole-dipole interaction strengths (~2.6 MHz) achievable via off-resonant microwave dressing of Rydberg states. These parameters are compatible with Rubidium-based platforms already under consideration for Tengena’s prototyping. Strategically, integrating qCTC dynamics into Tengena’s platform enables: temporal coherence without external clocks, reducing control overhead; correlation-driven phase stability, enhancing fault tolerance in quantum logic; and modular subsystems that self-organize as a resource, not a constraint for hybrid quantum-photonic chips. # DOI: https://lnkd.in/eh92Ujdh

  • View profile for Anantha Rao

    PhD Candidate @ QuICS/UMD

    1,533 followers

    #NewPaperAlert ⚛️ Happy to start the year with an exciting result on scaling up solid-state spin qubits! Checkout our paper: "Towards autonomous time-calibration of large quantum-dot devices: Detection, real-time feedback, and noise spectroscopy." on arxiv (2512.24894) Scaling quantum computers is as much about maintaining stability as it is about qubit count, more qubits only help if we can control them. Today, we have proof-of-principle few qubit devices, but scaling to thousands or millions of qubits would require autonomous qubit control that can recalibrate devices in real-time before noise exhausts their coherence (T2) times. It is well known that device imperfections, fabrication inhomogeneities and the vicious two-level fluctuators (#TLFs) can cause each qubit to face different local environments that lead to non-markovian noise and power-law noise processes. Manifesting as drifts in gate voltages, these lead to lower qubit gate-fidelity and eventually forbid fault-tolerance. This begs the question, how do we autonomously track drift in device parameters and apply feedback to correct for them? Answer: By tracking quantum dots in (2+1) D ! With experimental collaborators, we present a study on evaluating drift in quantum dots, identifying noise processes and applying real-time feedback. In this work, we propose to monitor a sequence of 2D charge stability maps in time as a probe of the local electrostatic environment. In a first set of experiments, we track 10 quantum dots arranged on a 2D lattice and autonomously flag drifts as big as 5 millivolts! Access to these local trajectories also helps us to study the underlying noise processes, think power spectral densities and Allan variances of each dot without a sensor next to it. This in turn informs us on any two-level switching and provides feedback on device fabrication. Tracking all quantum dots, helps us identify a linear correlation length in our device, approximately 188 nanometers, implying that qubits within this distance can have correlated-errors (an absolute no-no!) and suggesting that qubits be operated farther than this length. We also propose simple proportional-only feedback protocols to stabilize each quantum dot over time. To make contact with experiments, we benchmark the robustness of our approach and find that our method offers a detection accuracy of upto ~90% for signal-to-noise ratios of 0.7. I hope these methods become a standard part of the autonomous qubit tuning stack, leading to more stable, fault-tolerant hardware. Huge thanks to my collaborators Barnaby van Straaten, Francesco Borsoi, Menno Veldhorst, and Justyna Zwolak for the support. Happy to see this collaboration between University of Maryland – College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences and Delft University of Technology progress! 🔗 Read the full paper on arXiv: https://lnkd.in/edSVuCz3 #QuantumComputing #Physics #SpinQubits #DeepTech #FaultTolerance

  • View profile for John Prisco

    President and CEO at Safe Quantum Inc.

    11,582 followers

    The stability of quantum computations using trapped ions faces a significant challenge from the loss of individual ions, an event that can cascade and destroy the entire quantum state. Nolan J. Coble from the University of Maryland, College Park, Min Ye, and Nicolas Delfosse from IonQ Inc, now demonstrate a method to correct for these chain losses in long sequences of trapped ions. Their work addresses a critical problem, as even rare ion loss events destabilise the entire chain, effectively erasing all quantum information. The team proposes a distributed error correction code, incorporating ‘beacon’ qubits to detect chain loss and a decoder to convert these losses into correctable errors, thereby safeguarding quantum computations against this pervasive source of instability. https://lnkd.in/ettbCF6i

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