19 research outputs found
Identification and Control of Electron-Nuclear Spin Defects in Diamond
We experimentally demonstrate an approach to scale up quantum devices by harnessing spin defects in the environment of a quantum probe. We follow this approach to identify, locate, and control two electron-nuclear spin defects in the environment of a single nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond. By performing spectroscopy at various orientations of the magnetic field, we extract the unknown parameters of the hyperfine and dipolar interaction tensors, which we use to locate the two spin defects and design control sequences to initialize, manipulate, and readout their quantum state. Finally, we create quantum coherence among the three electron spins, paving the way for the creation of genuine tripartite entanglement. This approach will be useful in assembling multispin quantum registers for applications in quantum sensing and quantum information processing
Identification and control of an environmental spin defect beyond the coherence limit of a central spin
Electronic spin defects in the environment of an optically-active spin can be
used to increase the size and hence the performance of solid-state quantum
registers, especially for applications in quantum metrology and quantum
communication. Although multi-qubit electronic-spin registers have been
realized using dark spins in the environment of a Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) center
in diamond, these registers have only included spins directly coupled to the
NV, significantly restricting their maximum attainable size. To address this
problem, we present a scalable approach to increase the size of electronic-spin
registers. Our approach exploits a weakly-coupled probe spin together with
double-resonance control sequences to mediate the transfer of spin polarization
between the central NV spin and an environmental spin that is not directly
coupled to it. We experimentally realize this approach to demonstrate the
detection and coherent control of an unknown electronic spin outside the
coherence limit of a central NV. Our work paves the way for engineering larger
quantum spin registers, which have the potential to advance nanoscale sensing,
enable correlated noise spectroscopy for error correction, and facilitate the
realization of spin-chain quantum wires for quantum communication
Environment-assisted quantum-enhanced sensing with electronic spins in diamond
The performance of solid-state quantum sensors based on electronic spin
defects is often limited by the presence of environmental spin impurities that
cause decoherence. A promising approach to improve these quantum sensors is to
convert environment spins into useful resources for sensing. Here we
demonstrate the efficient use of an unknown electronic spin defect in the
proximity of a nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond as both a quantum sensor and
a quantum memory. We first experimentally evaluate the improvement in magnetic
field sensing provided by mixed entangled states of the two electronic spins.
Our results critically highlight the tradeoff between the advantages expected
from increasing the number of spin sensors and the typical challenges
associated with increasing control errors, decoherence rates, and time
overheads. Still, by taking advantage of the spin defect as both a quantum
sensor and a quantum memory whose state can be repetitively measured to improve
the readout fidelity, we can achieve a gain in performance over the use of a
single-spin sensor. These results show that the efficient use of available
quantum resources can enhance quantum devices, pointing to a practical strategy
towards quantum-enhanced sensing and information processing by exploiting
environment spin defects.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Identification and Control of Electron-Nuclear Spin Defects in Diamond
We experimentally demonstrate an approach to scale up quantum devices by harnessing spin defects in the environment of a quantum probe. We follow this approach to identify, locate, and control two electron-nuclear spin defects in the environment of a single nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond. By performing spectroscopy at various orientations of the magnetic field, we extract the unknown parameters of the hyperfine and dipolar interaction tensors, which we use to locate the two spin defects and design control sequences to initialize, manipulate, and readout their quantum state. Finally, we create quantum coherence among the three electron spins, paving the way for the creation of genuine tripartite entanglement. This approach will be useful in assembling multispin quantum registers for applications in quantum sensing and quantum information processing
Environment-assisted Quantum-enhanced Sensing with Electronic Spins in Diamond
The performance of solid-state quantum sensors based on electronic spin defects is often limited by the presence of environmental spin impurities that cause decoherence. A promising approach to improve these quantum sensors is to convert environment spins into useful resources for sensing, in particular, entangled states. However, the sensitivity enhancement that can be achieved from entangled states is limited by experimental constraints, such as control errors, decoherence, and time overheads. Here we experimentally demonstrate the efficient use of an unknown electronic spin defect in the proximity of a nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond to achieve both an entangled quantum sensor and a quantum memory for readout. We show that, whereas entanglement alone does not provide an enhancement in sensitivity, combining both entanglement and repetitive readout achieves an enhancement in performance over the use of a single-spin sensor, and more broadly we discuss regimes where sensitivity could be enhanced. Our results critically highlight the challenges in improving quantum sensors using entangled states of electronic spins, while providing an important benchmark in the quest for entanglement-assisted metrology
Repetitive readout and real-time control of nuclear spin qubits in Yb atoms
We demonstrate high fidelity repetitive projective measurements of nuclear
spin qubits in an array of neutral ytterbium-171 (Yb) atoms. We show
that the qubit state can be measured with a fidelity of 0.995(4) under a
condition that leaves it in the state corresponding to the measurement outcome
with a probability of 0.993(6) for a single tweezer and 0.981(4) averaged over
the array. This is accomplished by near-perfect cyclicity of one of the nuclear
spin qubit states with an optically excited state under a magnetic field of
G, resulting in a bright/dark contrast of during
fluorescence readout. The performance improves further as . The
state-averaged readout survival of 0.98(1) is limited by off-resonant
scattering to dark states and can be addressed via post-selection by measuring
the atom number at the end of the circuit, or during the circuit by performing
a measurement of both qubit states. We combine projective measurements with
high-fidelity rotations of the nuclear spin qubit via an AC magnetic field to
explore several paradigmatic scenarios, including the non-commutivity of
measurements in orthogonal bases, and the quantum Zeno mechanism in which
measurements "freeze" coherent evolution. Finally, we employ real-time
feedforward to repetitively deterministically prepare the qubit in the or
direction after initializing it in an orthogonal basis and performing a
projective measurement in the -basis. These capabilities constitute an
important step towards adaptive quantum circuits with atom arrays, such as in
measurement-based quantum computation, fast many-body state preparation,
holographic dynamics simulations, and quantum error correction
An architecture for two-qubit encoding in neutral ytterbium-171 atoms
We present an architecture for encoding two qubits within the optical "clock"
transition and nuclear spin-1/2 degree of freedom of neutral ytterbium-171
atoms. Inspired by recent high-fidelity control of all pairs of states within
this four-dimensional ququart space, we present a toolbox for intra-ququart
(single atom) one- and two-qubit gates, inter-ququart (two atom) Rydberg-based
two- and four-qubit gates, and quantum nondemolition (QND) readout. We then use
this toolbox to demonstrate the advantages of the ququart encoding for
entanglement distillation and quantum error correction which exhibit superior
hardware efficiency and better performance in some cases since fewer two-atom
(Rydberg-based) operations are required. Finally, leveraging single-state QND
readout in our ququart encoding, we present a unique approach to studying
interactive circuits as well as to realizing a symmetry protected topological
phase of a spin-1 chain with a shallow, constant-depth circuit. These
applications are all within reach of recent experiments with neutral
ytterbium-171 atom arrays or with several trapped ion species.Comment: 22 pages, 14 figure