High-fidelity laser-free universal control of two trapped ion qubits

ORAL

Abstract

Universal control of multiple qubits -- the ability to entangle qubits and to perform arbitrary individual qubit operations -- is a fundamental resource for quantum computation, simulation, and networking. Here, we implement a new laser-free scheme for universal control of trapped ion qubits based on microwave magnetic fields and radiofrequency magnetic field gradients. We demonstrate high-fidelity entanglement and individual control by creating symmetric and antisymmetric two-qubit maximally entangled states with fidelities in the intervals [0.9983, 1] and [0.9964, 0.9988], respectively, at 68% confidence, corrected for state initialization error. This technique is robust against multiple sources of decoherence, usable with essentially any trapped ion species, and has the potential to perform simultaneous entangling operations on many pairs of ions without increasing control signal power or complexity.

*This work was supported by the NIST Quantum Information Program and ONR.

Publication: R. Srinivas et al., arXiv:2102.12533

Presenters

  • Raghavendra Srinivas

    • University of Oxford
    • University of Colorado, Boulder

Authors

  • Raghavendra Srinivas

    • University of Oxford
    • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Shaun C Burd

    • National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
    • Stanford University
  • Hannah M Knaack

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Robert T Sutherland

    • University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio
    • The University of Texas at San Antonio
  • Alex Kwiatkowski

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Scott Glancy

    • National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
  • Emanuel Knill

    • National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
  • David J Wineland

    • University of Oregon
  • Dietrich Leibfried

    • National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
  • Andrew C Wilson

    • National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
  • David T Allcock

    • University of Oregon
  • Daniel H Slichter

    • National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder