713 research outputs found
Universal pulse sequence to minimize spin dephasing in the central spin decoherence problem
We present a remarkable finding that a recently discovered [G. S. Uhrig,
Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 100504 (2007)] series of pulse sequences, designed to
optimally restore coherence to a qubit in the spin-boson model of decoherence,
is in fact completely model-independent and generically valid for arbitrary
dephasing Hamiltonians given sufficiently short delay times between pulses. The
series maximizes qubit fidelity versus number of applied pulses for
sufficiently short delay times because the series, with each additional pulse,
cancels successive orders of a time expansion for the fidelity decay. The
"magical" universality of this property, which was not appreciated earlier,
requires that a linearly growing set of "unknowns" (the delay times) must
simultaneously satisfy an exponentially growing set of nonlinear equations that
involve arbitrary dephasing Hamiltonian operators.Comment: Published in PRL, revise
Concatenated dynamical decoupling in a solid-state spin bath
Concatenated dynamical decoupling (CDD) pulse sequences hold much promise as
a strategy to mitigate decoherence in quantum information processing. It is
important to investigate the actual performance of these dynamical decoupling
strategies in real systems that are promising qubit candidates. In this Rapid
Communication, we compute the echo decay of concatenations of the Hahn echo
sequence for a solid-state electronic spin qubit in a nuclear spin bath using a
cluster expansion technique. We find that each level of concatenation reverses
the effect of successive levels of intrabath fluctuations. On the one hand,
this advances CDD as a versatile and realistic decoupling strategy. On the
other hand, this invalidates, as overly optimistic, results of the simple pair
approximation used previously to study restoration, through CDD, of coherence
lost to a mesoscopic spin bath
Quantum theory of spectral diffusion induced electron spin decoherence
A quantum cluster expansion method is developed for the problem of localized
electron spin decoherence due to dipolar fluctuations of lattice nuclear spins.
At the lowest order it provides a microscopic explanation for the Lorentzian
diffusion of Hahn echoes without resorting to any phenomenological Markovian
assumption. Our numerical results show remarkable agreement with recent
electron spin echo experiments in phosphorus doped silicon.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Nuclear Spins as Quantum Memory in Semiconductor Nanostructures
We theoretically consider solid state nuclear spins in a semiconductor
nanostructure environment as long-lived, high-fidelity quantum memory. In
particular, we calculate, in the limit of a strong applied magnetic field, the
fidelity versus time of P donor nuclear spins in random bath environments of Si
and GaAs, and the lifetime of excited intrinsic spins in polarized Si and GaAs
environments. In the former situation, the nuclear spin dephases due to
spectral diffusion induced by the dipolar interaction among nuclei in the bath.
We calculate the decay of nuclear spin quantum memory in the context of Hahn
and Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) refocused spin echoes using a formally
exact cluster expansion technique which has previously been successful in
dealing with electron spin dephasing in a solid state nuclear spin bath. With
decoherence dominated by transverse dephasing (T2), we find it feasible to
maintain high fidelity (losses of less than 10^{-6}) quantum memory on nuclear
spins for times of the order of 100 microseconds (GaAs:P) and 1 to 2
milliseconds (natural Si:P) using CPMG pulse sequences of just a few (~2-4)
applied pulses. We also consider the complementary situation of a central
flipped intrinsic nuclear spin in a bath of completely polarized nuclear spins
where decoherence is caused by the direct flip-flop of the central spin with
spins in the bath. Exact numerical calculations that include a sufficiently
large neighborhood of surrounding nuclei show lifetimes on the order of 1-5 ms
for both GaAs and natural Si. Our calculated nuclear spin coherence times may
have significance for solid state quantum computer architectures using
localized electron spins in semiconductors where nuclear spins have been
proposed for quantum memory storage
Quantum theory for electron spin decoherence induced by nuclear spin dynamics in semiconductor quantum computer architectures: Spectral diffusion of localized electron spins in the nuclear solid-state environment
We consider the decoherence of a single localized electron spin due to its
coupling to the lattice nuclear spin bath in a semiconductor quantum computer
architecture. In the presence of an external magnetic field and at low
temperatures, the dominant decoherence mechanism is the spectral diffusion of
the electron spin resonance frequency due to the temporally fluctuating random
magnetic field associated with the dipolar interaction induced flip-flops of
nuclear spin pairs. The electron spin dephasing due to this random magnetic
field depends intricately on the quantum dynamics of the nuclear spin bath,
making the coupled decoherence problem difficult to solve. We provide a
formally exact solution of this non-Markovian quantum decoherence problem which
numerically calculates accurate spin decoherence at short times, which is of
particular relevance in solid-state spin quantum computer architectures. A
quantum cluster expansion method is developed, motivated, and tested for the
problem of localized electron spin decoherence due to dipolar fluctuations of
lattice nuclear spins. The method is presented with enough generality for
possible application to other types of spin decoherence problems. We present
numerical results which are in quantitative agreement with electron spin echo
measurements in phosphorus doped silicon. We also present spin echo decay
results for quantum dots in GaAs which differ qualitatively from that of the
phosphorus doped silicon system. Our theoretical results provide the ultimate
limit on the spin coherence (at least, as characterized by Hahn spin echo
measurements) of localized electrons in semiconductors in the low temperature
and the moderate to high magnetic field regime of interest in scalable
semiconductor quantum computer architectures.Comment: 23 pages, 15 figure
Wavefunction considerations for the central spin decoherence problem in a nuclear spin bath
Decoherence of a localized electron spin in a solid state material (the
``central spin'' problem) at low temperature is believed to be dominated by
interactions with nuclear spins in the lattice. This decoherence is partially
suppressed through the application of a large magnetic field that splits the
energy levels of the electron spin and prevents depolarization. However,
dephasing decoherence resulting from a dynamical nuclear spin bath cannot be
removed in this way. Fluctuations of the nuclear field lead to uncertainty of
the electron's precessional frequency in a process known as spectral diffusion.
This article considers the effect of the electron's wavefunction shape upon
spectral diffusion and provides wavefunction dependent decoherence time
formulas for free induction decay as well as spin echoes and concatenated
dynamical decoupling schemes for enhancing coherence. We also discuss dephasing
of a qubit encoded in singlet-triplet states of a double quantum dot. A central
theoretical result of this work is the development of a continuum approximation
for the spectral diffusion problem which we have applied to GaAs and InAs
materials specifically
Spectral Properties of the Core and the VLBI-Jets of Cygnus A
We present a detailed VLBI study of the spectral properties of the inner core
region of the radio galaxy Cygnus A at 5 GHz, 15 GHz, 22 GHz, 43 GHz and 86
GHz. Our observations include an epoch using phase-referencing at 15 GHz and 22
GHz and the first successful VLBI observations of Cygnus A at 86 GHz. We find a
pronounced two-sided jet structure, with a steep spectrum along the jet and an
inverted spectrum towards the counter-jet. The inverted spectrum and the
frequency-dependent jet-to-counter-jet ratio suggest that the inner counter-jet
is covered by a circum-nuclear absorber as it is proposed by the unified
scheme.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, Proceedings of the 7th EVN Symposium held in
Toledo, Spain in October 2004, needs evn2004.cl
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