168 research outputs found
Optimal Phonon-to-Spin Mapping in a system of a trapped ion
We propose a protocol for measurement of the phonon number distribution of a
harmonic oscillator based on selective mapping to a discrete spin-1/2 degree of
freedom. We consider a system of a harmonically trapped ion, where a transition
between two long lived states can be driven with resolved motional sidebands.
The required unitary transforms are generated by amplitude-modulated
polychromatic radiation fields, where the time-domain ramps are obtained from
numerical optimization by application of the Chopped RAndom Basis (CRAB)
algorithm. We provide a detailed analysis of the scaling behavior of the
attainable fidelities and required times for the mapping transform with respect
to the size of the Hilbert space. As one application we show how the mapping
can be employed as a building block for experiments which require measurement
of the work distribution of a quantum process
A single ion as a shot noise limited magnetic field gradient probe
It is expected that ion trap quantum computing can be made scalable through
protocols that make use of transport of ion qubits between sub-regions within
the ion trap. In this scenario, any magnetic field inhomogeneity the ion
experiences during the transport, may lead to dephasing and loss of fidelity.
Here we demonstrate how to measure, and compensate for, magnetic field
gradients inside a segmented ion trap, by transporting a single ion over
variable distances. We attain a relative magnetic field sensitivity of \Delta
B/B_0 ~ 5*10^{-7} over a test distance of 140 \micro m, which can be extended
to the mm range, still with sub \micro m resolution. A fast experimental
sequence is presented, facilitating its use as a magnetic field gradient
calibration routine, and it is demonstrated that the main limitation is the
quantum shot noise.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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