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Pulsed excitation and shelving schemes for <sup>138</sup>Ba<sup>+</sup> ion-photon entanglement generation

POSTER

Abstract

The scaling of trapped ions in a single ion trap zone is hampered by spectral crowding, the increased susceptibility to background gas collisions, and complicated optical addressing setups. To avoid these problems, we envision connecting smaller trapped-ion quantum computers through optical links of single photons, allowing for quantum entanglement of separated ion chains. We use 138Ba+ as a communication ion because it has a relatively long-wavelength S1/2 to P1/2 transition and is therefore the most amenable to integrated photonic technologies. The main limitation in this solution is the entanglement generation rate, which previously was limited by optical pumping to the D3/2 state, so our goal is to increase this rate by exciting directly from the S state. We present details about a new single-photon generation scheme using a pulsed laser source at 493 nm for the S to P transition in 138Ba+ and an electron-shelving detection scheme using the narrow 1762 nm transition from S1/2 to D5/2.

Presenters

  • Isabella Goetting

    Duke University

Authors

  • Isabella Goetting

    Duke University

  • Mikhail Shalaev

    Duke Quantum Center and Department of Computer and Electrical Engineering, Duke University, Duke University

  • Jameson O'Reilly

    Duke Quantum Center and Department of Physics, Duke University, Duke University

  • George Toh

    Duke Quantum Center and Department of Computer and Electrical Engineering, Duke University, Duke University

  • Sagnik Saha

    Duke Quantum Center and Department of Physics, Duke University, Duke University

  • Tingguang Li

    Duke Quantum Center and Department of Physics, Duke University, Duke University

  • Christopher R Monroe

    Duke Quantum Center and Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (and Physics), Duke University, Durham, NC; IonQ, Inc., College Park, MD, -Duke Quantum Center and Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (and Physics), Duke University, Durham, NC; IonQ, Inc., College Park, MD, Duke University