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1 Trey Porto Joint Quantum Institute NIST / University of Maryland ICAP 2008 Coherent control of pairs of atoms in a double-well optical lattice
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Optically trapped neutral atoms Quantum information Many-body physics Two motivating directions Light to trap and control atoms
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Optical Trapping: Lattice Tweezer “Bottom up” individual atom control, add more traps “Top Down” start massively parallel add complexity combine approaches to meet in the middle Holographic techniques
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Optical Trapping: Lattice Tweezer “Bottom up” individual atom control, add more traps “Top Down” start massively parallel add complexity combine approaches to meet in the middle Holographic techniques This talk
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Double Well Lattice Quantum information Many-body physics Two motivating directions for double well lattices Paredes next talk Bloch Hot Topics II
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Neutral atom quantum computing Well characterized qubits Ability to (re)initialize Decoherence times longer than operation times A universal set of gates 1) One-qubit 2) Two-qubit State specific readout All in a Scalable Architecture Minimal Requirements
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Controlled two-neutral atom interactions Two individually trapped atoms Arrays of pairs of atoms in double-well lattice Toward two qubit gates Browaeys Monday
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Provide test-bed for scalable ideas e.g. sub-wavelength addressing Demonstrate spin-controlled 2-neutral atom interactions Goals (also a platform for quantum information using global/parallel control)
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2D Double Well ‘ ’ ‘ ’ Basic idea: Combine two different period lattices with adjustable - intensities - positions += AB 2 control parameters
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+ = /2 nodes BEC Mirror Folded retro-reflection is phase stable Polarization Controlled 2-period Lattice Sebby-Strabley et al., PRA 73 033605 (2006)
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Add an independent, deep vertical lattice 3D lattice = independent array of 2D systems 3D confinement Mott insulator single atom per /2 site
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Add an independent, deep vertical lattice 3D lattice = independent array of 2D systems 3D confinement Mott insulator single atom/ /2 site Details handled by the postdocs… BEC, load into lattice, Mott insulator, adjust over 8 angles … Sebby-Strabley, et al., PRA 73 033605 (2006) Sebby-Strabley, et al., PRL 98 200405 (2007)
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X-Y directions coupled - checkerboard topology - not sinusoidal (in all directions) (e.g., leads to very different tunneling) - spin-dependence in sub-lattice - blue-detuned lattice is different from red-detuned - non-trivial Band-structure Unique Lattice Features Different from recent work in Mainz Folling et al. Nature 448 1029 (2007)
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This talk: Isolated a double-well sites Focus on a single double-well negligible coupling/tunneling between double-wells
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Basis Measurements Release from lattice Allow for time-of flight Absorption Imaging gives momentum distribution
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Basis Measurements Absorption Imaging give momentum distribution All atoms in an excited vibrational level
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Basis Measurements Absorption Imaging give momentum distribution
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Basis Measurements Absorption Imaging give momentum distribution All atoms in ground vibrational level
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Basis Measurements Absorption Imaging give momentum distribution Stern-Gerlach Spin measurement B-Field gradient
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Lattice Brillioun Zone Mapping
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Provide test-bed for scalable ideas e.g. sub-wavelength addressing Demonstrate spin-controlled 2-neutral atom interactions Goals
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X-Y directions coupled - checkerboard topology - not sinusoidal (in all directions) (e.g., leads to very different tunneling) - spin-dependence in sub-lattice - blue-detuned lattice is different from red-detuned - non-trivial Band-structure Unique Lattice Features Different from recent work in Mainz Folling et al. Nature 448 1029 (2007)
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Intensity modulation effective magnetic field Polarization modulation Scalar vs. Vector Light Shifts
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Can be coupled with perpendicular RF fields Effective magnetic field Aside: dressed spin-dependent lattice Haycock, Jessen, PRL 85 3365 (2000) Sub wavelength structure: Yi, Daley, Pupillo, Zoller NJP 10 073015 (2008)
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Aside: dressed spin-dependent lattice RF coupling N. Lundblad et al. PRL 100, 150401 (2008) Effective B-field lattice RF-dressed lattice
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Intensity modulation effective magnetic field Polarization modulation Scalar vs. Vector Light Shifts Optical Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Sub-lattice addressing in a double-well Make the lattice spin-dependent Apply RF resonant with local Zeeman shift
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Sub-lattice addressing in a double-well Left sites Right sites ≈ 1kGauss/cm ! Lee et al., PRL 99 020402 (2007)
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Example: Addressable One-qubit gates Optical Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Example: Addressable One-qubit gates Optical Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Example: Addressable One-qubit gates RF, wave or Raman Optical Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Example: Addressable One-qubit gates Zhang, Rolston Das Sarma, PRA, 74 042316 (2006) Optical Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Provide test-bed for scalable ideas e.g. sub-wavelength addressing Demonstrate spin-controlled 2-neutral atom interactions Goals
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optical 87 Rb Choices for qubit states Field sensitive states 0 1 0 2 Work at high field, quadratic Zeeman isolates two of the F=1 states 1 m F = -2 m F = -1 Easily controlled with RF qubit states are sub-lattice addressable
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optical 87 Rb Choices for qubit states Field insensitive states at B=0 0 1 0 2 1 m F = -2 m F = -1 controlled with wave qubit states are not sub-lattice addressable need auxiliary states
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optical 87 Rb Choices for qubit states Field insensitive states at B=3.2 Gauss 0 1 0 2 1 m F = -2 m F = -1 controlled with wave qubit states are not sub-lattice addressable need auxiliary states
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optical 87 Rb Choices for qubit states Field sensitive states 0 1 0 2 1 m F = -2 m F = -1
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Dynamic vibrational control Merge pairs of atoms to control interactions Maintain separate orbital (vibrational) states: qubits are always labeled and distinct.
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Dynamic vibrational control Problem : 87 Rb has very weak spin-dependent interactions Approach: Use symmetry & “exchange” interactions
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Experimental requirements Step 1: load single atoms into sites Step 2: independently control spins Step 3: combine wells into same site, wait for time T Step 4: measure state occupation (orbital + spin) 1) 2) 3) 4)
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Single particle states in a double-well 2 “orbital” states ( L, R ) 2 spin states (0,1) qubit label qubit 4 states( + other higher orbital states )
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Single particle states in a double-well 2 “orbital” states ( g, e ) 2 spin states (0,1) qubit label qubit 4 states( other states = “leakage )
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Two particle states in a double-well Two (identical) particle states have - interactions - symmetry
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Separated two qubit states single qubit energy L= left, R = right
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Merged two qubit states single qubit energy Bosons must be symmetric under particle exchange e= excited, g = ground
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+ - Symmetrized, merged two qubit states interaction energy
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+ - Symmetrized, merged two qubit states Spin-triplet, Space-symmetric Spin-singlet, Space-Antisymmetric
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+ - Symmetrized, merged two qubit states Spin-triplet, Space-symmetric Spin-singlet, Space-Antisymmetric r 1 = r 2 See Hayes, Julliene and Deutsch, PRL 98 070501 (2007)
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Exchange and the swap gate + - += Start in “Turn on” interactions spin-exchange dynamics Universal entangling operation
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Basis Measurements Stern-Gerlach + “Vibrational-mapping”
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Swap Oscillations Onsite exchange -> fast 140 s swap time ~700 s total manipulation time Population coherence preserved for >10 ms. ( despite 150 s T2*! ) Anderlini et al. Nature 448 452 (2007)
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- Initial Mott state preparation (30% holes -> 50% bad pairs) - Imperfect vibrational motion ~ 85% - Imperfect projection onto T 0, S ~ 95% - Sub-lattice spin control >95% - Field stability Current (Improvable) Limitations
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- Initial Mott state preparation (30% holes -> 50% bad pairs) - Imperfect vibrational motion - Imperfect projection onto T 0, S - Sub-lattice spin control - Field stability Current (Improvable) Limitations Filtering pairs Coherent quantum control Composite pulsing Clock States
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Move to clock states 0 1 0 2 1 m F = -2 m F = -1 0 1 0 2 1 m F = -2 m F = -1 T 2 ~ 280 ms (prev. 300 s) OR Improved frequency resolution Improved coherence times
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Move to clock states 0 1 0 2 1 m F = -2 m F = -1 0 1 0 2 1 m F = -2 m F = -1 OR Requires auxiliary states Plus wave/RF mapping between states e.g.
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Move to clock states 0 1 0 2 1 m F = -2 m F = -1 0 1 0 2 1 m F = -2 m F = -1 OR e.g. 2-body loss becomes important: p-wave loss dominant!
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Quantum control techniques Gate control parameters unoptimized optimized De Chiara, Calarco et al. PRA 77, 052333 (2008)
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Faraday rotation: improved diagnostics Left site s Righ t sites Single shot measurementMultiple-shot spectroscopy vs. More than 30 times less efficient quadratic Zeeman Sub-lattice spectroscopy
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Future Longer term: -individual addressing lattice + “tweezer” - use strength of parallelism, e.g. cluster states and quantum cellular automata
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Postdocs Jenni Sebby-Strabley Marco Anderlini Ben Brown Patty Lee Nathan Lundblad John Obrecht BenJenni Marco Patty Double-well People Patty Nathan John Ian Spielman, Bill Phillips Former postdocs/students Bruno Laburthe Chad Fertig Ken O’Hara Johnny Huckans
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The End
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Dynamic vibrational control
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Faraday rotation: improved diagnostics polarization analyzer Real-time, single-shot spectroscopy Example: single-shot spectrogram of 10 MHz frequency sweep
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Quantum control techniques Example: optimized merge for exchange gate Gate control parameters unoptimized optimized Optimized at very short 150 s merge time and only for vib. motion! (Longer times and full optimization should be better.) De Chiara et al., PRA 77, 052333 (2008)
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Aside: Dressed spin-dependent latttices RF coupling N. Lundblad et al. PRL 100, 150401 (2008) Effective B-field latticeRF-dressed lattice
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Coherent Evolution First /2Second /2 RF
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Controlled Exchange Interactions
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Sweep Low High Sweep High Low Faraday signals.
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Outline - Demonstration of controlled Exchange oscillations -Intro to lattice - lattice. - state dependence. - qubit choice. -Demonstrations -Exchange oscillations -Theory of exchange - future directions with clock states. Better T2 and spin echo Considerations: filtering coherent quantum control dipolar loss detailed lattice characterization faraday
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