113 research outputs found

    Theory of qubit noise characterization using the long-time cavity transmission

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    Noise induced decoherence is one of the main threats to large-scale quantum computation. In an attempt to assess the noise affecting a qubit we go beyond the standard steady-state solution of the transmission through a qubit-coupled cavity in input-output theory by including dynamical noise in the description of the system. We solve the quantum Langevin equations exactly for a noise-free system and treat the noise as a perturbation. In the long-time limit the corrections may be written as a sum of convolutions of the noise power spectral density with an integration kernel that depends on external control parameters. Using the convolution theorem, we invert the corrections and obtain relations for the noise spectral density as an integral over measurable quantities. Additionally, we treat the noise exactly in the dispersive regime, and again find that noise characteristics are imprinted in the long-time transmission in convolutions containing the power spectral density.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure

    Transmission-based noise spectroscopy for quadratic qubit-resonator interactions

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    We develop a theory describing the transient transmission through noisy qubit-resonator systems with quadratic interactions as are found in superconducting and nanomechanical resonators coupled to solid-state qubits. After generalizing the quantum Langevin equations to arbitrary qubit-resonator couplings, we show that only the cases of linear and quadratic couplings allow for an analytical treatment within standard input-output theory. Focussing for the first time on quadratic couplings and allowing for arbitrary initial qubit coherences, it is shown that noise characteristics can be extracted from input-output measurements by recording both the averaged fluctuations in the transmission probability and the averaged phase. Our results represent an extension to the field of transmission-based noise spectroscopy with immediate practical applications.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure

    Adiabatic Control of Spin-Wave Propagation using Magnetisation Gradients

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    Spin waves are of large interest as data carriers for future logic devices. However, due to the strong anisotropic dispersion relation of dipolar spin-waves in in-plane magnetised films the realisation of two-dimensional information transport remains a challenge. Bending of the energy flow is prohibited since energy and momentum of spin waves cannot be conserved while changing the direction of wave propagation. Thus, non-linear or non-stationary mechanisms are usually employed. Here, we propose to use reconfigurable laser-induced magnetisation gradients to break the system's translational symmetry. The resulting changes in the magnetisation shift the dispersion relations locally and allow for operating with different spin-wave modes at the same frequency. Spin-wave momentum is first transformed via refraction at the edge of the magnetisation gradient region and then adiabatically modified inside it. Along these lines the spin-wave propagation direction can be controlled in a broad frequency range with high efficiency
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