2,155 research outputs found
Electrical Detection of Coherent Nuclear Spin Oscillations in Phosphorus-Doped Silicon Using Pulsed ENDOR
We demonstrate the electrical detection of pulsed X-band Electron Nuclear
Double Resonance (ENDOR) in phosphorus-doped silicon at 5\,K. A pulse sequence
analogous to Davies ENDOR in conventional electron spin resonance is used to
measure the nuclear spin transition frequencies of the P nuclear spins,
where the P electron spins are detected electrically via spin-dependent
transitions through Si/SiO interface states, thus not relying on a
polarization of the electron spin system. In addition, the electrical detection
of coherent nuclear spin oscillations is shown, demonstrating the feasibility
to electrically read out the spin states of possible nuclear spin qubits.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Control and Manipulation of Cold Atoms in Optical Tweezers
Neutral atoms trapped by laser light are amongst the most promising
candidates for storing and processing information in a quantum computer or
simulator. The application certainly calls for a scalable and flexible scheme
for addressing and manipulating the atoms. We have now made this a reality by
implementing a fast and versatile method to dynamically control the position of
neutral atoms trapped in optical tweezers. The tweezers result from a spatial
light modulator (SLM) controlling and shaping a large number of optical
dipole-force traps. Trapped atoms adapt to any change in the potential
landscape, such that one can re-arrange and randomly access individual sites
within atom-trap arrays.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Overcoming Noise in Entanglement Distribution
Noise can be considered the natural enemy of quantum information. An often
implied benefit of high-dimensional entanglement is its increased resilience to
noise. However, manifesting this potential in an experimentally meaningful
fashion is challenging and has never been done before. In infinite dimensional
spaces, discretisation is inevitable and renders the effective dimension of
quantum states a tunable parameter. Owing to advances in experimental
techniques and theoretical tools, we demonstrate an increased resistance to
noise by identifying two pathways to exploit high-dimensional entangled states.
Our study is based on two separate experiments utilising canonical
spatio-temporal properties of entangled photon pairs. Following these different
pathways to noise resilience, we are able to certify entanglement in the
photonic orbital-angular-momentum and energy-time degrees of freedom up to
noise conditions corresponding to a noise fraction of 72 % and 92 %
respectively. Our work paves the way towards practical quantum communication
systems that are able to surpass current noise and distance limitations, while
not compromising on potential device-independence.Comment: 12 pages main text, 7 pages supplementary information, 6 figure
Lock-in detection for pulsed electrically detected magnetic resonance
We show that in pulsed electrically detected magnetic resonance (pEDMR)
signal modulation in combination with a lock-in detection scheme can reduce the
low-frequency noise level by one order of magnitude and in addition removes the
microwave-induced non-resonant background. This is exemplarily demonstrated for
spin-echo measurements in phosphorus-doped Silicon. The modulation of the
signal is achieved by cycling the phase of the projection pulse used in pEDMR
for the read-out of the spin state.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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