Robust Qudit Hamiltonian Engineering: Applications to NV Centers
ORAL
Abstract
While robust dynamical decoupling and Hamiltonian engineering techniques are well-developed and highly successful for qubit systems, extensions to qudits involving more than two levels are much less explored. However, the development of such techniques for qudit systems may enable the engineering of novel classes of Hamiltonians for many-body physics, or the development of quantum sensors with higher sensitivity. In this talk, we outline extensions of robust Hamiltonian engineering techniques to qudit systems. We develop general design techniques for pulse sequences that decouple spin-1 dipolar interactions and disorder, while remaining robust against finite pulse duration imperfections, and show their applications in dynamical decoupling, quantum sensing, and the creation of exotic many-body states such as quantum many-body scars. While we illustrate our results in a dense ensemble of NV centers, our methodology and pulse sequences apply to any quantum information platform that obeys the rotating wave approximation, such as superconducting qubits, trapped atoms and quantum dots.
–
Presenters
-
Hengyun Zhou
Harvard University
Authors
-
Hengyun Zhou
Harvard University
-
Nathaniel Leitao
Harvard University
-
Leigh Martin
Harvard University
-
Alexander Douglas
Harvard University
-
Iris Cong
Harvard University
-
Oksana Makarova
Harvard University
-
Matthew Tyler
Harvard University
-
Nishad Maskara
Harvard University
-
Joonhee Choi
Harvard University
-
Soonwon Choi
University of California, Berkeley, UC Berkeley
-
Mikhail Lukin
Harvard University, Physics, Harvard