27 research outputs found
Decoherence in a Josephson junction qubit
The zero-voltage state of a Josephson junction biased with constant current
consists of a set of metastable quantum energy levels. We probe the spacings of
these levels by using microwave spectroscopy to enhance the escape rate to the
voltage state. The widths of the resonances give a measurement of the coherence
time of the two states involved in the transitions. We observe a decoherence
time shorter than that expected from dissipation alone in resonantly isolated
20 um x 5 um Al/AlOx/Al junctions at 60 mK. The data is well fit by a model
including dephasing effects of both low-frequency current noise and the escape
rate to the continuum voltage states. We discuss implications for quantum
computation using current-biased Josephson junction qubits, including the
minimum number of levels needed in the well to obtain an acceptable error limit
per gate.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Measuring the decoherence rate in a semiconductor charge qubit
We describe a method by which the decoherence time of a solid state qubit may
be measured. The qubit is coded in the orbital degree of freedom of a single
electron bound to a pair of donor impurities in a semiconductor host. The qubit
is manipulated by adiabatically varying an external electric field. We show
that, by measuring the total probability of a successful qubit rotation as a
function of the control field parameters, the decoherence rate may be
determined. We estimate various system parameters, including the decoherence
rates due to electromagnetic fluctuations and acoustic phonons. We find that,
for reasonable physical parameters, the experiment is possible with existing
technology. In particular, the use of adiabatic control fields implies that the
experiment can be performed with control electronics with a time resolution of
tens of nanoseconds.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, revtex
Two-particle localization and antiresonance in disordered spin and qubit chains
We show that, in a system with defects, two-particle states may experience
destructive quantum interference, or antiresonance. It prevents an excitation
localized on a defect from decaying even where the decay is allowed by energy
conservation. The system studied is a qubit chain or an equivalent spin chain
with an anisotropic () exchange coupling in a magnetic field. The chain
has a defect with an excess on-site energy. It corresponds to a qubit with the
level spacing different from other qubits. We show that, because of the
interaction between excitations, a single defect may lead to multiple localized
states. The energy spectra and localization lengths are found for
two-excitation states. The localization of excitations facilitates the
operation of a quantum computer. Analytical results for strongly anisotropic
coupling are confirmed by numerical studies.Comment: Updated version, 13 pages, 5 figures To appear in Phys. Rev. B (2003
Arbitrary rotation and entanglement of flux SQUID qubits
We propose a new approach for the arbitrary rotation of a three-level SQUID
qubit and describe a new strategy for the creation of coherence transfer and
entangled states between two three-level SQUID qubits. The former is succeeded
by exploring the coupled-uncoupled states of the system when irradiated with
two microwave pulses, and the latter is succeeded by placing the SQUID qubits
into a microwave cavity and used adiabatic passage methods for their
manipulation.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Robust stationary entanglement of two coupled qubits in independent environments
The dissipative dynamics of two interacting qubits coupled to independent
reservoirs at nonzero temperatures is investigated, paying special attention to
the entanglement evolution. The counter-rotating terms in the qubit-qubit
interaction give rise to stationary entanglement, traceable back to the ground
state structure. The robustness of this entanglement against thermal noise is
thoroughly analyzed, establishing that it can be detected at reasonable
experimental temperatures. Some effects linked to a possible reservoir
asymmetry are brought to light.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures; version accepted for publication on Eur. Phys. J.
Non-Markovian entanglement dynamics in coupled superconducting qubit systems
We theoretically analyze the entanglement generation and dynamics by coupled
Josephson junction qubits. Considering a current-biased Josephson junction
(CBJJ), we generate maximally entangled states. In particular, the entanglement
dynamics is considered as a function of the decoherence parameters, such as the
temperature, the ratio between the reservoir cutoff
frequency and the system oscillator frequency , % between
the characteristic frequency of the %quantum system of interest, and
the cut-off frequency of %Ohmic reservoir and the energy levels
split of the superconducting circuits in the non-Markovian master equation. We
analyzed the entanglement sudden death (ESD) and entanglement sudden birth
(ESB) by the non-Markovian master equation. Furthermore, we find that the
larger the ratio and the thermal energy , the shorter the
decoherence. In this superconducting qubit system we find that the entanglement
can be controlled and the ESD time can be prolonged by adjusting the
temperature and the superconducting phases which split the energy
levels.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Effects of decoherence and errors on Bell-inequality violation
We study optimal conditions for violation of the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt
form of the Bell inequality in the presence of decoherence and measurement
errors. We obtain all detector configurations providing the maximal Bell
inequality violation for a general (pure or mixed) state. We consider local
decoherence which includes energy relaxation at the zero temperature and
arbitrary dephasing. Conditions for the maximal Bell-inequality violation in
the presence of decoherence are analyzed both analytically and numerically for
the general case and for a number of important special cases. Combined effects
of measurement errors and decoherence are also discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure
Large-amplitude driving of a superconducting artificial atom: Interferometry, cooling, and amplitude spectroscopy
Superconducting persistent-current qubits are quantum-coherent artificial
atoms with multiple, tunable energy levels. In the presence of large-amplitude
harmonic excitation, the qubit state can be driven through one or more of the
constituent energy-level avoided crossings. The resulting
Landau-Zener-Stueckelberg (LZS) transitions mediate a rich array of
quantum-coherent phenomena. We review here three experimental works based on
LZS transitions: Mach-Zehnder-type interferometry between repeated LZS
transitions, microwave-induced cooling, and amplitude spectroscopy. These
experiments exhibit a remarkable agreement with theory, and are extensible to
other solid-state and atomic qubit modalities. We anticipate they will find
application to qubit state-preparation and control methods for quantum
information science and technology.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure