We present a biased atomic qubit, universally implementable across all atomic platforms, encoded as a “spin cat” within ground state Zeeman levels. The key characteristic of our configuration is the coupling of the ground state spin manifold of size Fg≫1 to an excited Zeeman spin manifold of size Fe=Fg−1 using light. This coupling results in eigenstates of the driven atom that include exactly two dark states in the ground state manifold, which are decoupled from light and immune to spontaneous emission from the excited states. These dark states constitute the spin cat, leading to the designation “dark spin cat.” We demonstrate that under strong Rabi drive and for large Fg, the dark spin cat is autonomously stabilized against common noise sources and encodes a qubit with significantly biased noise. Specifically, the bit-flip error rate decreases exponentially with Fg relative to the dephasing rate. We provide an analysis of dark spin cats and their robustness to noise, and we discuss bias-preserving single qubit and entangling gates, exemplified on a Rydberg tweezer platform.
European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking, 101018180 HPCQS HORIZON EUROPE Framework Programme, 101113690 Army Research Office, W911NF-23-1-0077 Air Force Office of Scientific Research, FA9550-19-1-0399 Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, HR0011-24-9-0359 National Science Foundation, OMA-1936118 NTT Research Samsung David and Lucile Packard Foundation, 2020-71479 Army Research Office, W911NF-21-1-0325 National Science Foundation, ERC-1941583 National Science Foundation, OMA-2137642 National Science Foundation, OSI-2326767 National Science Foundation, CCF-2312755 Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, HR0011-24-9-0361 Air Force Office of Scientific Research Air Force Office of Scientific Research, FA9550-21-1-0209 Air Force Office of Scientific Research, FA9550-23-1-0338
Publication Date
2025-07-08
Language
English
Copyright Statement
Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article's title, journal citation, and DOI.