High-fidelity entanglement of trapped ions using long-wavelength radiation
This thesis describes experimental work in which the spin and motional states of one and two trapped atomic ions are manipulated with long-wavelength radiation in the microwave and radio frequency (RF) regime. This allows single- and two-qubit quantum logic gates to be implemented with long-waveleng...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Published: |
Imperial College London
2015
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.684330 |
id |
ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-684330 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
spelling |
ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6843302017-08-30T03:16:38ZHigh-fidelity entanglement of trapped ions using long-wavelength radiationRandall, Joseph Aidan DelfKim, Myungshik2015This thesis describes experimental work in which the spin and motional states of one and two trapped atomic ions are manipulated with long-wavelength radiation in the microwave and radio frequency (RF) regime. This allows single- and two-qubit quantum logic gates to be implemented with long-wavelength radiation, in contrast to laser frequency radiation used in the majority of work to date. The two-qubit gate scheme developed represents a significant advance towards a large scale quantum computing architecture in which laser light is not needed for coherent manipulation. An experimental setup is built in which a macroscopic linear Paul trap is fitted with permanent magnets to create a strong axial magnetic field gradient. This addition allows the spin and motional states of the ions to be coupled using long-wavelength radiation. The coherence time of qubits that are sensitive to the magnetic field gradient is increased by nearly three orders of magnitude with the use of dressed states and the lifetime and coherence time are measured to be T1 = 0.63(4) s and T2 = 0.65(5) s, respectively. Using the dressed-state qubit, sideband cooling of a single ion to the motional ground state is demonstrated, and the final mean phonon number after cooling is measured to be \bar{n} = 0.13(4). Finally, a two-qubit gate is demonstrated using the dressed-state qubits in conjunction with the magnetic field gradient, and a Bell state fidelity of F = 0.985(12) is determined. This is a significant increase in fidelity for a two-qubit gate based on long-wavelength radiation compared to previous work. The errors are analysed and it is shown that with the next generation of microfabricated traps being developed in the group, the gate fidelity using this scheme can be pushed far into the fault tolerant regime. This makes this scheme promising as an integral part of a large scale quantum computing architecture.539.7Imperial College Londonhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.684330http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/31528Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
collection |
NDLTD |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
539.7 |
spellingShingle |
539.7 Randall, Joseph Aidan Delf High-fidelity entanglement of trapped ions using long-wavelength radiation |
description |
This thesis describes experimental work in which the spin and motional states of one and two trapped atomic ions are manipulated with long-wavelength radiation in the microwave and radio frequency (RF) regime. This allows single- and two-qubit quantum logic gates to be implemented with long-wavelength radiation, in contrast to laser frequency radiation used in the majority of work to date. The two-qubit gate scheme developed represents a significant advance towards a large scale quantum computing architecture in which laser light is not needed for coherent manipulation. An experimental setup is built in which a macroscopic linear Paul trap is fitted with permanent magnets to create a strong axial magnetic field gradient. This addition allows the spin and motional states of the ions to be coupled using long-wavelength radiation. The coherence time of qubits that are sensitive to the magnetic field gradient is increased by nearly three orders of magnitude with the use of dressed states and the lifetime and coherence time are measured to be T1 = 0.63(4) s and T2 = 0.65(5) s, respectively. Using the dressed-state qubit, sideband cooling of a single ion to the motional ground state is demonstrated, and the final mean phonon number after cooling is measured to be \bar{n} = 0.13(4). Finally, a two-qubit gate is demonstrated using the dressed-state qubits in conjunction with the magnetic field gradient, and a Bell state fidelity of F = 0.985(12) is determined. This is a significant increase in fidelity for a two-qubit gate based on long-wavelength radiation compared to previous work. The errors are analysed and it is shown that with the next generation of microfabricated traps being developed in the group, the gate fidelity using this scheme can be pushed far into the fault tolerant regime. This makes this scheme promising as an integral part of a large scale quantum computing architecture. |
author2 |
Kim, Myungshik |
author_facet |
Kim, Myungshik Randall, Joseph Aidan Delf |
author |
Randall, Joseph Aidan Delf |
author_sort |
Randall, Joseph Aidan Delf |
title |
High-fidelity entanglement of trapped ions using long-wavelength radiation |
title_short |
High-fidelity entanglement of trapped ions using long-wavelength radiation |
title_full |
High-fidelity entanglement of trapped ions using long-wavelength radiation |
title_fullStr |
High-fidelity entanglement of trapped ions using long-wavelength radiation |
title_full_unstemmed |
High-fidelity entanglement of trapped ions using long-wavelength radiation |
title_sort |
high-fidelity entanglement of trapped ions using long-wavelength radiation |
publisher |
Imperial College London |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.684330 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT randalljosephaidandelf highfidelityentanglementoftrappedionsusinglongwavelengthradiation |
_version_ |
1718521767526400000 |