TYPE | Solid State Institute Seminar |
Speaker: | Professor Rainer Blatt |
Affiliation: | Instittue for Experimental Physics, University of Innsbruck, Austria |
Parent Event: | Quantum information processing with trapped ions |
Date: | 22.03.2017 |
Time: | 12:30 - 13:30 |
Location: | Lidow 620 |
Remark: | Host: Distinguished Professor Moti Segev |
Presentation: | |
Abstract: | In this talk, the basic toolbox of the Innsbruck quantum information processor based on a string of trapped Ca+ ions will be reviewed. For quantum information processing, the toolbox operations are employed for quantum computations [1], for quantum simulations [2], and with optical cavities and photons they are used for the implementation of quantum interfaces [3] for the realization of quantum networks. For quantum computation, a scalable Shor algorithm was realized [1] with a string of trapped Ca+ ions. Towards scaling the trapped ion quantum computer, we encode one logical qubit in entangled states distributed over seven trapped-ion qubits. We demonstrate the capability of the code to detect one bit flip, phase flip or a combined error of both, regardless on which of the qubits they occur. Furthermore, we apply combinations of the entire set of logical single-qubit Clifford gates on the encoded qubit to explore its computational capabilities [4]. The quantum toolbox is further applied to carry out both analog and digital quantum simulations. The basic simulation procedure will be presented and its application will be discussed for a variety of spin Hamiltonians. Moreover, a spectroscopic technique is presented to study artificial quantum matter and use it for characterizing quasiparticles in a many-body system of trapped atomic ions [5]. For the realization of a quantum interface, trapped Ca+ ions in a cavity QED setup allow entanglement of a qubit with a photon and quantum state mapping [3]. [1] T. Monz et al., Science 351, 1068 (2016). [2] P. Jurcevic et al., Nature 511, 202 (2014). [3] T. Northup and R. Blatt, Nature Photonics 8, 356 (2014). [4] D. Nigg et al., Science 345, 302 (2014). [5] P. Jurcevic et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 100501 (2015) |