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Showing papers by "Xie Chen published in 2007"


Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, a layered planar rf trap design was proposed to create arbitrary two-dimensional lattices of ions, which can be used to simulate spin systems and enable the solution of problems that otherwise require infeasible classical resources.
Abstract: Quantum simulations of spin systems could enable the solution of problems that otherwise require infeasible classical resources. Such a simulation may be implemented using a well-controlled system of effective spins, such as a two-dimensional lattice of locally interacting ions. We propose here a layered planar rf trap design that can be used to create arbitrary two-dimensional lattices of ions. The design also leads naturally to ease of microfabrication. As a first experimental demonstration, we confine S88r+ ions in a millimeter-scale lattice trap and verify numerical models of the trap by measuring the motional frequencies. We also confine 440 nm diameter charged microspheres and observe ion-ion repulsion between ions in neighboring lattice sites. Our design, when scaled to smaller ion-ion distances, is appropriate for quantum simulation schemes, e.g., that of Porras and Cirac [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 207901 (2004)]. We note, however, that in practical realizations of the trap, an increase in the secular frequency with decreasing ion spacing may make a coupling rate that is large relative to the decoherence rate in such a trap difficult to achieve.Quantum simulations of spin systems could enable the solution of problems that otherwise require infeasible classical resources. Such a simulation may be implemented using a well-controlled system of effective spins, such as a two-dimensional lattice of locally interacting ions. We propose here a layered planar rf trap design that can be used to create arbitrary two-dimensional lattices of ions. The design also leads naturally to ease of microfabrication. As a first experimental demonstration, we confine S88r+ ions in a millimeter-scale lattice trap and verify numerical models of the trap by measuring the motional frequencies. We also confine 440 nm diameter charged microspheres and observe ion-ion repulsion between ions in neighboring lattice sites. Our design, when scaled to smaller ion-ion distances, is appropriate for quantum simulation schemes, e.g., that of Porras and Cirac [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 207901 (2004)]. We note, however, that in practical realizations of the trap, an increase in the secular ...

51 citations