Control of open quantum systems

Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Nuclear Engineering, February 2005. === Includes bibliographical references (p. 93-102). === This thesis describes the development, investigation and experimental implementation via liquid state nuclear magnetic resonance techniques of...

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Main Author: Boulant, Nicolas
Other Authors: David G. Cory.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2006
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/34437
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spelling ndltd-MIT-oai-dspace.mit.edu-1721.1-344372019-05-02T16:29:51Z Control of open quantum systems Boulant, Nicolas David G. Cory. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Nuclear Engineering. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Nuclear Engineering. Nuclear Engineering. Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Nuclear Engineering, February 2005. Includes bibliographical references (p. 93-102). This thesis describes the development, investigation and experimental implementation via liquid state nuclear magnetic resonance techniques of new methods for controlling open quantum systems. First, methods that improve coherent control through the use of both strong control fields and detailed knowledge of the subsystem's Hamiltonian are demonstrated. With the aid of numerical search methods, pulsed irradiation schemes are obtained that perform accurate, arbitrary, selective gates on multi-qubit systems. For systems of 3 and 4 qubits, simulations show that the control sequences faithfully implement unitary operations with gate fidelities on the order of 0.999 while experimentally determined correlations of 0.99 were obtained. The technique is then extended to account for the incoherent errors arising from the slow variation of control parameters. It is demonstrated in this study that such errors can be greatly counteracted directly from the design of the time-dependent control fields if some knowledge about the incoherence source is available. The results obtained show a substantial decrease of the non-unitary features normally caused by incoherent noise. The methods are applicable to a variety of experimental studies in quantum information processing. (cont.) To test the control techniques, we carried out two benchmark experiments, namely an entanglement transfer and an entanglement swapping experiment performed on a 4-qubit system. The second experiment, while more complex, yields significantly better results, thereby showing the improvement made by the further development of the control techniques. To optimally protect a quantum system against various decoherent errors, it is essential to design methods to acquire knowledge about them. It is in this context that we then develop a robust method for quantum process tomography for measuring relaxation superoperators and Lindblad operators, which is experimentally tested. Finally, we explore both theoretically and experimentally the concatenation of a quantum error correction code with a decoherence-free subspace scheme. Using the two techniques, a 4-qubit quantum system is efficiently protected against a noise containing partial symmetry. To date, this is the first experimental demonstration of such a concatenation scheme. by Nicolas Boulant. Ph.D. 2006-11-07T12:09:43Z 2006-11-07T12:09:43Z 2004 2005 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/34437 70684429 eng M.I.T. theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. See provided URL for inquiries about permission. http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/7582 102 p. 7333196 bytes 7337416 bytes application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Nuclear Engineering.
spellingShingle Nuclear Engineering.
Boulant, Nicolas
Control of open quantum systems
description Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Nuclear Engineering, February 2005. === Includes bibliographical references (p. 93-102). === This thesis describes the development, investigation and experimental implementation via liquid state nuclear magnetic resonance techniques of new methods for controlling open quantum systems. First, methods that improve coherent control through the use of both strong control fields and detailed knowledge of the subsystem's Hamiltonian are demonstrated. With the aid of numerical search methods, pulsed irradiation schemes are obtained that perform accurate, arbitrary, selective gates on multi-qubit systems. For systems of 3 and 4 qubits, simulations show that the control sequences faithfully implement unitary operations with gate fidelities on the order of 0.999 while experimentally determined correlations of 0.99 were obtained. The technique is then extended to account for the incoherent errors arising from the slow variation of control parameters. It is demonstrated in this study that such errors can be greatly counteracted directly from the design of the time-dependent control fields if some knowledge about the incoherence source is available. The results obtained show a substantial decrease of the non-unitary features normally caused by incoherent noise. The methods are applicable to a variety of experimental studies in quantum information processing. === (cont.) To test the control techniques, we carried out two benchmark experiments, namely an entanglement transfer and an entanglement swapping experiment performed on a 4-qubit system. The second experiment, while more complex, yields significantly better results, thereby showing the improvement made by the further development of the control techniques. To optimally protect a quantum system against various decoherent errors, it is essential to design methods to acquire knowledge about them. It is in this context that we then develop a robust method for quantum process tomography for measuring relaxation superoperators and Lindblad operators, which is experimentally tested. Finally, we explore both theoretically and experimentally the concatenation of a quantum error correction code with a decoherence-free subspace scheme. Using the two techniques, a 4-qubit quantum system is efficiently protected against a noise containing partial symmetry. To date, this is the first experimental demonstration of such a concatenation scheme. === by Nicolas Boulant. === Ph.D.
author2 David G. Cory.
author_facet David G. Cory.
Boulant, Nicolas
author Boulant, Nicolas
author_sort Boulant, Nicolas
title Control of open quantum systems
title_short Control of open quantum systems
title_full Control of open quantum systems
title_fullStr Control of open quantum systems
title_full_unstemmed Control of open quantum systems
title_sort control of open quantum systems
publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/34437
work_keys_str_mv AT boulantnicolas controlofopenquantumsystems
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