Quantum engineering with a tweezer array of ultracold CaF molecule

ORAL

Abstract

Ultracold polar molecules trapped in programmable tweezer arrays are emerging as a promising system for quantum information processing and quantum simulation, due to their intrinsic electric dipole moment and intricate internal structures. The long-lived molecular rotational states provide robust qubit states, and molecules can exchange rotational excitations via dipolar interactions, producing long-range spin-exchange Hamiltonians with tunable spatial anisotropy. These interactions have been used to generate on-demand entanglement via two-qubit (two-molecule) gates, but a primary limitation in the gate fidelity has been the decoherence caused by thermal motion of the molecules [Science 382,1138-1143(2023)]].

Here, we report improvement in the coherence of the dipolar interactions and two-qubit gates by cooling an array of calcium monofluoride (CaF) molecules to near their motional ground state. Furthermore, we present progress towards creating a two-dimensional array of molecules. The ability to create arbitrary patterns of CaF molecules in 2D, combined with the precise single-site control offered by the optical tweezer platform and tunable entangling interactions, opens the door to probing strongly-interacting many-body quantum phases.

Finally, we highlight enhancement of molecular density and number through the implementation of a “conveyor-belt” MOT, which further optimizes the system for a range of applications utilizing high-density, optically trapped ultracold molecules, including precision measurement and the production of degenerate quantum gasses.

*This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, National Quantum Information Science Research Centers, Quantum Systems Accelerator and Harvard-MIT Center for Ultracold Atoms (Grant No. PHY-2317134). Additional support is provided by AFOSR, AOARD, and ARO. S.Y. acknowledges support from the NSF GRFP. L.A. and S. Y. acknowledge support from the HQI. E.C. acknowledges support from the NRF of Korea (Grants No. 2022M3C1C8097622, RS-2024-00439981, and RS-2024- 00531938)

Publication: arXiv preprint:2409.15262

Presenters

  • Scarlett Seejia Seejia Yu

    • Harvard University

Authors

  • Scarlett Seejia Seejia Yu

    • Harvard University
  • Jiaqi You

    • Harvard University
  • Avikar Periwal

    • Harvard University
  • Eunmi Chae

    • Korea University
  • Wolfgang Ketterle

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Kang-Kuen Ni

    • Harvard University
  • John M Doyle

    • Harvard University