Skip to main content
Paper Reproduction3 claims tested

A programmable two-qubit quantum processor in silicon

Watson et al.Nature 555, 633-637 (2018)

QuTech / TU Delft | Si/SiGe spin qubits (2 qubits)arXiv:1708.04214
100%3/3

Backends Tested

QI EmulatorQI Tuna-9

Failure Modes

PASS3 (100%)

Claim-by-Claim Comparison

Each claim from the paper is tested on multiple quantum backends. Published values are compared against our measurements.

Bell state fidelity from 3-axis tomography (ZZ, XX, YY correlators)

Fig. 3Published: 87.00% +/- 0.02 fidelity
BackendMeasuredDiscrepancyStatus
QI Emulator100.00%+0.1300PASS
QI Tuna-982.90%-0.0410PARTIAL

QI Tuna-9: Tuna-9 mean Bell fidelity 0.829 (range 0.808-0.842), slightly below Watson's 0.85-0.89. Expected: Watson's 2-qubit chip was purpose-built for this experiment; Tuna-9 uses 2 of 9 qubits on a general-purpose processor. The 2-qubit gate (CZ via tunable coupler) adds more decoherence than Watson's exchange-based CNOT.

1-bit Deutsch-Josza algorithm correctly classifies all 4 oracles

Fig. 4aPublished: Yes
BackendMeasuredDiscrepancyStatus
QI EmulatorYesmatchPASS
QI Tuna-9YesmatchPASS

2-qubit Grover search finds correct target for all 4 possible marked items

Fig. 4bPublished: 0.8 +/- 0.05 probability
BackendMeasuredDiscrepancyStatus
QI Emulator1+0.2000PASS
QI Tuna-90.892+0.0920PASS

Cross-Backend Summary

BackendClaims TestedPassedPass RatePrimary Issue
QI Emulator33100%--
QI Tuna-93267%PARTIAL

Key Findings

QI Emulator: 3/3 claims matched. The simulation pipeline correctly reproduces the published physics.

QI Tuna-9: 2/3 claims matched. Hardware noise prevents full reproduction.

Report Metadata

Generated: 2/13/2026Paper ID: watson2018View PaperView raw JSON