We detect correlations in qubit-energy fluctuations of non-neighboring qubits defined in isotopically purified Si/Si-Ge quantum dots. At low frequencies (where the noise is strongest), the correlation coefficient reaches 10% for a next-nearest-neighbor qubit-pair separated by 200
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We detect correlations in qubit-energy fluctuations of non-neighboring qubits defined in isotopically purified Si/Si-Ge quantum dots. At low frequencies (where the noise is strongest), the correlation coefficient reaches 10% for a next-nearest-neighbor qubit-pair separated by 200 nm. Correlations with the charge-sensor signal reach up to 70%, proving that the observed noise is of electrical origin. A simple theoretical model quantitatively reproduces the measurements and predicts a polynomial decay of correlations with interqubit distance. Our results quantify long-range correlations of noise in quantum-dot spin-qubit arrays, essential for their scalability and fault tolerance.
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