Optical lattice-based addressing and control of long-lived neutral-atom qubits

ORAL

Abstract

Many proposed quantum computational platforms are driven by competing needs: isolating the quantum system from the environment to prevent decoherence, and easily and accurately controlling the system with external fields. For example, neutral-atom optical-lattice architectures provide environmental isolation through the use of states that are robust against fluctuating external fields, yet external fields are inherently useful for qubit addressing. Here we demonstrate a technique to address qubits formed from a pair of field-insensitive states by transferring the qubit into a {\em different} pair of field-insensitive states. A spatially inhomogeneous external field allows the addressing of particular ``marked" elements of a qubit register, leaving unmarked qubits unaffected, despite the presence of crosstalk or leakage of the addressing field. We demonstrate this technique in an ensemble of $^{87}$Rb atoms and show that we can robustly perform single-qubit rotations on qubits located at addressed lattice sites. This precise coherent control is an important step forward for lattice-based neutral-atom quantum computation, and is applicable to state transfer and qubit isolation in other architectures using field-insensitive qubits.

Authors

  • Nathan Lundblad

    JQI/NIST/UMD

  • Trey Porto

    JQI/NIST/UMD

  • Ian Spielman

    JQI/NIST/UMD

  • Radu Chicireanu

    JQI/NIST/UMD

  • William Phillips

    JQI/NIST/UMD