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Near-field microwave addressing of trapped-ion qubits for scalable quantum computation

TLDR
In this article, a two-zone single-layer surface-electrode ion trap is used to drive single-qubit rotations in the zone we choose to address whilst interferometrically cancelling the microwave field at the neighbor (non-addressed) zone.
Abstract
This thesis reports high-fidelity near-field spatial microwave addressing of long-lived 43Ca+ "atomic clock" qubits performed in a two-zone single-layer surface-electrode ion trap. Addressing is implemented by using two of the trap's integrated microwave electrodes, one in each zone, to drive single-qubit rotations in the zone we choose to address whilst interferometrically cancelling the microwave field at the neighbour (non-addressed) zone. Using this field-nulling scheme, we measure a Rabi frequency ratio between addressed and non-addressed zones of up to 1400, from which we calculate an addressing error (or a spin-flip probability on the qubit transition) of 1e-6. Off-resonant excitation out of the qubit state is a more significant source of error in this experiment, but we also demonstrate polarisation control of the microwave field at an error level of 2e-5, which, if combined with individual-ion addressing, would be sufficient to suppress off-resonant excitation errors to the 1e-9 level. Further, this thesis presents preliminary results obtained with a micron-scale coupled-microstrip differential antenna probe that can be scanned over an ion-trap chip to map microwave magnetic near fields. The probe is designed to enable the measurement of fields at tens of microns above electrode surfaces and to act as an effective characterisation tool, speeding up design-fabrication-characterisation cycles in the production of new prototype microwave ion-trap chips. Finally, a new multi-layer design for an ion-trap chip which displays, in simulations, a 100-fold improvement in addressing performance, is presented. The chip electrode structure is designed to use the cancelling effect of microwave return currents to produce Rabi frequency ratios of order 1000 between trap zones using a single microwave electrode (i.e. without the need for nulling fields). If realised, this chip could be used to drive individually addressed single-qubit operations on arrays of memory qubits in parallel and with high fidelity.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

An Optical-Lattice-Based Quantum Simulator For Relativistic Field Theories and Topological Insulators

TL;DR: In this paper, a spin-independent optical lattice is used to trap a collection of hyperfine states of the same alkaline atom, to which the different degrees of freedom of the field theory to be simulated are then mapped.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-fidelity spatial and polarization addressing of Ca-43 qubits using near-field microwave control

TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrate addressing of long-lived qubits held in separate zones of a microfabricated surface trap with integrated microwave electrodes, and measure a ratio of Rabi frequencies between addressed and nonaddressed qubits of up to 1400.
References
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Polynomial-Time Algorithms for Prime Factorization and Discrete Logarithms on a Quantum Computer

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered factoring integers and finding discrete logarithms on a quantum computer and gave an efficient randomized algorithm for these two problems, which takes a number of steps polynomial in the input size of the integer to be factored.
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Microwave engineering

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Good quantum error-correcting codes exist

TL;DR: The techniques investigated in this paper can be extended so as to reduce the accuracy required for factorization of numbers large enough to be difficult on conventional computers appears to be closer to one part in billions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Physical Implementation of Quantum Computation

TL;DR: In this article, the requirements for the physical implementation of quantum computation are discussed, plus two relating to the communication of quantum information are extensively explored and related to the many schemes in atomic physics, quantum optics, nuclear and electron magnetic resonance spectroscopy, superconducting electronics, and quantum-dot physics, for achieving quantum computing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Architecture for a large-scale ion-trap quantum computer

TL;DR: This work shows how to achieve massively parallel gate operation in a large-scale quantum computer, based on techniques already demonstrated for manipulating small quantum registers, and uses the use of decoherence-free subspaces to do so.
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