3,572 research outputs found
Experimental implementation of fully controlled dephasing dynamics and synthetic spectral densities
Engineering, controlling, and simulating quantum dynamics is a strenuous
task. However, these techniques are crucial to develop quantum technologies,
preserve quantum properties, and engineer decoherence. Earlier results have
demonstrated reservoir engineering, construction of a quantum simulator for
Markovian open systems, and controlled transition from Markovian to
non-Markovian regime. Dephasing is an ubiquitous mechanism to degrade the
performance of quantum computers. However, a fully controllable all-purpose
quantum simulator for generic dephasing is still missing. Here we demonstrate
full experimental control of dephasing allowing us to implement arbitrary
decoherence dynamics of a qubit. As examples, we use a photon to simulate the
dynamics of a qubit coupled to an Ising chain in a transverse field and also
demonstrate a simulation of non-positive dynamical map. Our platform opens the
possibility to simulate dephasing of any physical system and study fundamental
questions on open quantum systems.Comment: V2: Added some text and new figur
Robust quantum state engineering through coherent localization in biased-coin quantum walks
We address the performance of a coin-biased quantum walk as a generator for
non-classical position states of the walker. We exploit a phenomenon of
coherent localisation in the position space --- resulting from the choice of
small values of the coin parameter and assisted by post-selection --- to
engineer large-size coherent superpositions of distinguishable position states
of the walker. The protocol that we design appears to be remarkably robust
against both the actual value taken by the coin parameter and strong
dephasing-like noise acting on the spatial degree of freedom. We finally
illustrate a possible linear-optics implementation of our proposal, suitable
for both bulk and integrated-optics platforms.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Creation of resilient entangled states and a resource for measurement-based quantum computation with optical superlattices
We investigate how to create entangled states of ultracold atoms trapped in
optical lattices by dynamically manipulating the shape of the lattice
potential. We consider an additional potential (the superlattice) that allows
both the splitting of each site into a double well potential, and the control
of the height of potential barrier between sites. We use superlattice
manipulations to perform entangling operations between neighbouring qubits
encoded on the Zeeman levels of the atoms without having to perform transfers
between the different vibrational states of the atoms. We show how to use
superlattices to engineer many-body entangled states resilient to collective
dephasing noise. Also, we present a method to realize a 2D resource for
measurement-based quantum computing via Bell-pair measurements. We analyze
measurement networks that allow the execution of quantum algorithms while
maintaining the resilience properties of the system throughout the computation.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures, IOP style, published in New Journal of Physics.
Minor corrections/few typos remove
Quantum simulation via filtered Hamiltonian engineering: application to perfect quantum transport in spin networks
We propose a method for Hamiltonian engineering in quantum information
processing architectures that requires no local control, but only relies on
collective qubit rotations and field gradients. The technique achieves a
spatial modulation of the coupling strengths via a dynamical construction of a
weighting function combined with a Bragg grating. As an example, we demonstrate
how to generate the ideal Hamiltonian for perfect quantum information transport
between two separated nodes of a large spin network. We engineer a spin chain
with optimal couplings from a large spin network, such as naturally occurring
in crystals, while decoupling all unwanted interactions. For realistic
experimental parameters, our method can be used to drive perfect quantum
information transport at room-temperature. The Hamiltonian engineering method
can be made more robust under coherence and coupling disorder by a novel
apodization scheme. Thus the method is quite general and can be used engineer
the Hamiltonian of many complex spin lattices with different topologies and
interactions.Comment: v2: Extended robustness to decoherenc
Engineering the impact of phonon dephasing on the coherence of a WSe single-photon source via cavity quantum electrodynamics
Emitter dephasing is one of the key issues in the performance of solid-state
single photon sources. Among the various sources of dephasing, acoustic phonons
play a central role in adding decoherence to the single photon emission. Here,
we demonstrate, that it is possible to tune and engineer the coherence of
photons emitted from a single WSe monolayer quantum dot via selectively
coupling it to a spectral cavity resonance. We utilize an open cavity to
demonstrate spectral enhancement, leveling and suppression of the highly
asymmetric phonon sideband, finding excellent agreement with our microscopic
theory. Most importantly, the impact of cavity tuning on the dephasing is
directly assessed via optical interferometry, which clearly points out the
capability to utilize light-matter coupling to steer and design dephasing and
coherence of the emission properties of atomically thin crystals
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