52 research outputs found
Phenomenological Study of Decoherence in Solid-State Spin Qubits due to Nuclear Spin Diffusion
We present a study of the prospects for coherence preservation in solid-state
spin qubits using dynamical decoupling protocols. Recent experiments have
provided the first demonstrations of multipulse dynamical decoupling sequences
in this qubit system, but quantitative analyses of potential coherence
improvements have been hampered by a lack of concrete knowledge of the relevant
noise processes. We present simulations of qubit coherence under the
application of arbitrary dynamical decoupling pulse sequences based on an
experimentally validated semiclassical model. This phenomenological approach
bundles the details of underlying noise processes into a single experimentally
relevant noise power spectral density. Our results show that the dominant
features of experimental measurements in a two-electron singlet-triplet spin
qubit can be replicated using a noise power spectrum associated
with nuclear-spin-flips in the host material. Beginning with this validation we
address the effects of nuclear programming, high-frequency nuclear-spin
dynamics, and other high-frequency classical noise sources, with conjectures
supported by physical arguments and microscopic calculations where relevant.
Our results provide expected performance bounds and identify diagnostic metrics
that can be measured experimentally in order to better elucidate the underlying
nuclear spin dynamics.Comment: Updated References. Related articles at:
http://www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~mbiercuk/Publications.htm
Toward Spin Squeezing with Trapped Ions
Building robust instruments capable of making interferometric measurements
with precision beyond the standard quantum limit remains an important goal in
many metrology laboratories. We describe here the basic concepts underlying
spin squeezing experiments that allow one to surpass this limit. In priniciple
it is possible to reach the so-called Heisenberg limit, which constitutes an
improvement in precision by a factor , where is the number of
particles on which the measurement is carried out. In particular, we focus on
recent progress toward implementing spin squeezing with a cloud of beryllium
ions in a Penning ion trap, via the geometric phase gate used more commonly for
performing two-qubit entangling operations in quantum computing experiments.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, Contribution to Quantum Africa 2010 conference
proceeding
High-order noise filtering in nontrivial quantum logic gates
Treating the effects of a time-dependent classical dephasing environment
during quantum logic operations poses a theoretical challenge, as the
application of non-commuting control operations gives rise to both dephasing
and depolarization errors that must be accounted for in order to understand
total average error rates. We develop a treatment based on effective
Hamiltonian theory that allows us to efficiently model the effect of classical
noise on nontrivial single-bit quantum logic operations composed of arbitrary
control sequences. We present a general method to calculate the
ensemble-averaged entanglement fidelity to arbitrary order in terms of noise
filter functions, and provide explicit expressions to fourth order in the noise
strength. In the weak noise limit we derive explicit filter functions for a
broad class of piecewise-constant control sequences, and use them to study the
performance of dynamically corrected gates, yielding good agreement with
brute-force numerics.Comment: Revised and expanded to include filter function terms beyond first
order in the Magnus expansion. Related manuscripts available from
http://www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~mbiercu
The effect of noise correlations on randomized benchmarking
Among the most popular and well studied quantum characterization,
verification and validation techniques is randomized benchmarking (RB), an
important statistical tool used to characterize the performance of physical
logic operations useful in quantum information processing. In this work we
provide a detailed mathematical treatment of the effect of temporal noise
correlations on the outcomes of RB protocols. We provide a fully analytic
framework capturing the accumulation of error in RB expressed in terms of a
three-dimensional random walk in "Pauli space." Using this framework we derive
the probability density function describing RB outcomes (averaged over noise)
for both Markovian and correlated errors, which we show is generally described
by a gamma distribution with shape and scale parameters depending on the
correlation structure. Long temporal correlations impart large nonvanishing
variance and skew in the distribution towards high-fidelity outcomes --
consistent with existing experimental data -- highlighting potential
finite-sampling pitfalls and the divergence of the mean RB outcome from
worst-case errors in the presence of noise correlations. We use the
Filter-transfer function formalism to reveal the underlying reason for these
differences in terms of effective coherent averaging of correlated errors in
certain random sequences. We conclude by commenting on the impact of these
calculations on the utility of single-metric approaches to quantum
characterization, verification, and validation.Comment: Updated and expanded to include full derivation. Related papers
available from http://www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~mbiercuk/Publications.htm
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