347 research outputs found

    Decoherence processes in a current biased dc SQUID

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    A current bias dc SQUID behaves as an anharmonic quantum oscillator controlled by a bias current and an applied magnetic flux. We consider here its two level limit consisting of the two lower energy states | 0 \right> and | 1 \right>. We have measured energy relaxation times and microwave absorption for different bias currents and fluxes in the low microwave power limit. Decoherence times are extracted. The low frequency flux and current noise have been measured independently by analyzing the probability of current switching from the superconducting to the finite voltage state, as a function of applied flux. The high frequency part of the current noise is derived from the electromagnetic environment of the circuit. The decoherence of this quantum circuit can be fully accounted by these current and flux noise sources.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Nanosecond quantum state detection in a current biased dc SQUID

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    This article presents our procedure to measure the quantum state of a dc SQUID within a few nanoseconds, using an adiabatic dc flux pulse. Detection of the ground state is governed by standard macroscopic quantum theory (MQT), with a small correction due to residual noise in the bias current. In the two level limit, where the SQUID constitutes a phase qubit, an observed contrast of 0.54 indicates a significant loss in contrast compared to the MQT prediction. It is attributed to spurious depolarization (loss of excited state occupancy) during the leading edge of the adiabatic flux measurement pulse. We give a simple phenomenological relaxation model which is able to predict the observed contrast of multilevel Rabi oscillations for various microwave amplitudes.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure

    Direction of copper phthalocyanine crystallization using in situ generated tethered phthalocyanines

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    Copper phthalocyanine in the metastable α crystal polymorph can be obtained directly from phthalonitrile or from phthalodiimide, which would normally give the more stable β crystal form, by the inclusion of 3% or greater of the sulfide 2 or the diimide 3. The resulting α form material does not revert to the β form upon treatment in boiling xylene, unlike conventionally prepared α copper phthalocyanine

    Coherent oscillations in a superconducting multi-level quantum system

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    We have observed coherent time evolution of states in a multi-level quantum system, formed by a current-biased dc SQUID. The manipulation of the quantum states is achieved by resonant microwave pulses of flux. The number of quantum states participating in the coherent oscillations increases with increasing microwave power. Quantum measurement is performed by a nanosecond flux pulse which projects the final state onto one of two different voltage states of the dc SQUID, which can be read out

    Harvesting, coupling and control of single exciton coherences in photonic waveguide antennas

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    We perform coherent non-linear spectroscopy of individual excitons strongly confined in single InAs quantum dots (QDs). The retrieval of their intrinsically weak four-wave mixing (FWM) response is enabled by a one-dimensional dielectric waveguide antenna. Compared to a similar QD embedded in bulk media, the FWM detection sensitivity is enhanced by up to four orders of magnitude, over a broad operation bandwidth. Three-beam FWM is employed to investigate coherence and population dynamics within individual QD transitions. We retrieve their homogenous dephasing in a presence of spectral wandering. Two-dimensional FWM reveals off-resonant F\"orster coupling between a pair of distinct QDs embedded in the antenna. We also detect a higher order QD non-linearity (six-wave mixing) and use it to coherently control the FWM transient. Waveguide antennas enable to conceive multi-color coherent manipulation schemes of individual emitters.Comment: 7 pages, 8 Figure

    Reducing multi-photon rates in pulsed down-conversion by temporal multiplexing

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    We present a simple technique to reduce the emission rate of higher-order photon events from pulsed spontaneous parametric down-conversion. The technique uses extra-cavity control over a mode locked ultrafast laser to simultaneously increase repetition rate and reduce the energy of each pulse from the pump beam. We apply our scheme to a photonic quantum gate, showing improvements in the non-classical interference visibility for 2-photon and 4-photon experiments, and in the quantum-gate fidelity and entangled state production in the 2-photon case.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
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