Zeeman metastable qubit operations in trapped <sup>40</sup>Ca<sup>+</sup> ions
ORAL
Abstract
Dual-species trapped ion experiments provide benefits such as sympathetic cooling and ancilla readout without unwanted crosstalk and decoherence from scattered resonant photons. However, the different masses and transition frequencies of unlike ions introduce new technical challenges such as trap anharmonicities and the need for additional lasers. By encoding qubits in sublevels (hyperfine or Zeeman) of both the ground state and a long-lived metastable state, we achieve the benefits of multi-species operation within ions of a single species. Here, we investigate a metastable qubit stored in Zeeman sublevels of the 3D5/2 state of 40Ca+ ions. Operations on a neighboring ground-state 40Ca+ qubit can then be performed with minimal crosstalk. Metastable qubit gates are performed with RF pulses that drive transitions between two sublevels of the metastable state. The energy splittings between the six Zeeman levels are equal, so a laser is used to shift other levels out of resonance with the RF pulses. We also describe progress towards sympathetic cooling with a co-trapped ground state ion, as well as the potential for using the full Hilbert space of both the ground and metastable levels for qudit algorithms.
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Presenters
Kyle DeBry
MIT Lincoln Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT Lincoln Lab; MIT, Research Laboratory for Electronics
Authors
Kyle DeBry
MIT Lincoln Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT Lincoln Lab; MIT, Research Laboratory for Electronics
Penny E Brant
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Colin D Bruzewicz
MIT Lincoln Lab
David L Reens
MIT Lincoln Lab
May E Kim
MIT Lincoln Lab
Robert McConnell
MIT Lincoln Lab
Philip H Rich
MIT Lincoln Lab
Jules M Stuart
National Institute of Standards and Tech
Susanna L Todaro
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT, Research Laboratory for Electronics
Isaac L Chuang
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT, Research Laboratory for Electronics
John Chiaverini
Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lexington, MA 02421, USA, MIT Lincoln Lab, MIT Lincoln Lab; MIT Research Laboratory for Electronics