15 research outputs found
Quantum control of the motional states of trapped ions through fast switching of trapping potentials
We propose a new scheme for supplying voltages to the electrodes of
microfabricated ion traps, enabling access to a regime in which changes to the
trapping potential are made on timescales much shorter than the period of the
secular oscillation frequencies of the trapped ions. This opens up
possibilities for speeding up the transport of ions in segmented ion traps and
also provides access to control of multiple ions in a string faster than the
Coulomb interaction between them. We perform a theoretical study of ion
transport using these methods in a surface-electrode trap, characterizing the
precision required for a number of important control parameters. We also
consider the possibilities and limitations for generating motional state
squeezing using these techniques, which could be used as a basis for
investigations of Gaussian-state entanglement.Comment: Accepted by New Journal of Physic
A microfabricated ion trap with integrated microwave circuitry
We describe the design, fabrication and testing of a surface-electrode ion
trap, which incorporates microwave waveguides, resonators and coupling elements
for the manipulation of trapped ion qubits using near-field microwaves. The
trap is optimised to give a large microwave field gradient to allow
state-dependent manipulation of the ions' motional degrees of freedom, the key
to multiqubit entanglement. The microwave field near the centre of the trap is
characterised by driving hyperfine transitions in a single laser-cooled 43Ca+
ion.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Time-dependent Hamiltonian estimation for Doppler velocimetry of trapped ions
The time evolution of a closed quantum system is connected to its Hamiltonian
through Schroedinger's equation. The ability to estimate the Hamiltonian is
critical to our understanding of quantum systems, and allows optimization of
control. Though spectroscopic methods allow time-independent Hamiltonians to be
recovered, for time-dependent Hamiltonians this task is more challenging. Here,
using a single trapped ion, we experimentally demonstrate a method for
estimating a time-dependent Hamiltonian of a single qubit. The method involves
measuring the time evolution of the qubit in a fixed basis as a function of a
time-independent offset term added to the Hamiltonian. In our system the
initially unknown Hamiltonian arises from transporting an ion through a static,
near-resonant laser beam. Hamiltonian estimation allows us to estimate the
spatial dependence of the laser beam intensity and the ion's velocity as a
function of time. This work is of direct value in optimizing transport
operations and transport-based gates in scalable trapped ion quantum
information processing, while the estimation technique is general enough that
it can be applied to other quantum systems, aiding the pursuit of high
operational fidelities in quantum control.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Deterministic entanglement and tomography of ion spin qubits
We have implemented a universal quantum logic gate between qubits stored in
the spin state of a pair of trapped calcium 40 ions. An initial product state
was driven to a maximally entangled state deterministically, with 83% fidelity.
We present a general approach to quantum state tomography which achieves good
robustness to experimental noise and drift, and use it to measure the spin
state of the ions. We find the entanglement of formation is 0.54.Comment: 3 figures, 4 pages, footnotes fixe
Long-lived mesoscopic entanglement outside the Lamb-Dicke regime
We create entangled states of the spin and motion of a single Ca
ion in a linear ion trap. The motional part consists of coherent states of
large separation and long coherence time. The states are created by driving the
motion using counterpropagating laser beams. We theoretically study and
experimentally observe the behaviour outside the Lamb-Dicke regime, where the
trajectory in phase space is modified and the coherent states become squeezed.
We directly observe the modification of the return time of the trajectory, and
infer the squeezing. The mesoscopic entanglement is observed up to with coherence time 170 microseconds and mean phonon excitation
\nbar = 16.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Revised version after editor comment
Memory coherence of a sympathetically cooled trapped-ion qubit
We demonstrate sympathetic cooling of a 43Ca+ trapped-ion "memory" qubit by a
40Ca+ "coolant" ion near the ground state of both axial motional modes, whilst
maintaining coherence of the qubit. This is an essential ingredient in
trapped-ion quantum computers. The isotope shifts are sufficient to suppress
decoherence and phase shifts of the memory qubit due to the cooling light which
illuminates both ions. We measure the qubit coherence during 10 cycles of
sideband cooling, finding a coherence loss of 3.3% per cooling cycle. The
natural limit of the method is O(0.01%) infidelity per cooling cycle.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Keeping a Single Qubit Alive by Experimental Dynamic Decoupling
We demonstrate the use of dynamic decoupling techniques to extend the
coherence time of a single memory qubit by nearly two orders of magnitude. By
extending the Hahn spin-echo technique to correct for unknown, arbitrary
polynomial variations in the qubit precession frequency, we show analytically
that the required sequence of pi-pulses is identical to the Uhrig dynamic
decoupling (UDD) sequence. We compare UDD and CPMG sequences applied to a
single Ca-43 trapped-ion qubit and find that they afford comparable protection
in our ambient noise environment.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Time-separated entangled light pulses from a single-atom emitter
The controlled interaction between a single, trapped, laser-driven atom and
the mode of a high-finesse optical cavity allows for the generation of
temporally separated, entangled light pulses. Entanglement between the
photon-number fluctuations of the pulses is created and mediated via the atomic
center-of-mass motion, which is interfaced with light through the mechanical
effect of atom-photon interaction. By means of a quantum noise analysis we
determine the correlation matrix which characterizes the entanglement, as a
function of the system parameters. The scheme is feasible in experimentally
accessible parameter regimes. It may be easily extended to the generation of
entangled pulses at different frequencies, even at vastly different
wavelengths.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures. Modified version, to appear in the New Journal
of Physic