Trapped-ion qubits have been advantageous in quantum information processing due to their long coherence times and high-fidelity state preparation, logic gate operation, and readout. In recent years, we have fabricated chips with electrodes – for generating the electric field for trapping ions – and photonic waveguides and grating out-couplers – for delivering light to the ions. The integrated photonics can potentially lower the laser power requirement and lead to faster gates; however, there are challenges that need to be overcome for the platform to be beneficial. Here, we demonstrate single and two qubit gates with Sr+ trapped ion qubits, driven by delivering light to the ions both via free space and integrated photonics. We show that robust quantum logic is within reach using the integrated photonic platform, and the approaches we are taking in mitigating current challenges.
Ethan Clements, Matthew Bohman, May Kim, Kaifeng Cui, Aaron Hankin, Samuel Brewer, Jose Valencia, Chin-wen Chou, William McGrew, Nicholas Nardelli, Youssef Hassan, Xiaogang Zhang, Holly Leopardi, Tara Fortier, Andrew Ludlow, David Hume, David Leibrandt
Laser noise usually limits the stability of optical frequency ratio measurements, limiting the speed and precision one can compare two atomic frequency standards. In this talk I will describe two methods, correlation and differential spectroscopy, which utilize correlations in laser noise to increase the achievable interrogation time and thus increase the frequency comparison stability. Correlation spectroscopy is a technique which uses a parity measurement following a synchronized Ramsey interrogation to measure the relative frequency of two similar frequency atomic clocks. With this technique we achieve a measurement instability of (4×10^(-16))⁄√(τ⁄s) for a comparison of two single 27Al+ ion clocks. Differential spectroscopy uses an atomic clock with low projection noise, here a 171Yb lattice clock, to correct the phase noise of a second, higher frequency clock’s local oscillator thereby reducing the measurement instability to the level of the first. This can be further extended using two lattice clocks in a zero dead time configuration to correct the phase noise beyond the interrogation time reachable for a single Yb lattice clock. With these techniques we achieve measurement stabilities of (2.5×10^(-16))⁄√(τ⁄s) and (2×10^(-16))⁄√(τ⁄s) for a comparison between a single 27Al+ ion clock and a 171Yb lattice clock running as single clock and in a zero dead time configuration respectively. In addition to these techniques, I will also discuss recent progress towards characterizing the systematics of the NIST 40Ca+/27Al+ optical atomic clock.
Previously, we had proposed the technique of light shift imbalance induced blockade which leads to a condition where a collection of non-interacting atoms under laser excitation remains combined to a superposition of the ground and the fist excited states, thus realizing a collective state quantum bit which in turn can be used to realize a quantum computer. In this paper, we show first that the light shift imbalance by itself is actually not enough to produce such a blockade, and explain the reason by the limitation of our previous analysis had reached this constraint. We then show that by introducing Rydberg interaction, it is possible to achieve such a blockade for a wide range of parameters. Analytic arguments used to establish these results are confirmed by numerical simulations. The fidelity of coupled quantum gates based on such collective state qubits is highly insensitive to the exact number of atoms in the ensemble. As such, this approach may prove be viable for scalable quantum computing based on neutral atoms.
Conference Committee Involvement (4)
Quantum Sensing, Imaging, and Precision Metrology III
25 January 2025 | San Francisco, California, United States
Quantum Sensing, Imaging, and Precision Metrology II
27 January 2024 | San Francisco, California, United States
Quantum Sensing, Imaging, and Precision Metrology
28 January 2023 | San Francisco, California, United States
Optical and Quantum Sensing and Precision Metrology II
22 January 2022 | San Francisco, California, United States
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