Dispersive optical systems for scalable Raman driving of hyperfine qubits
Author(s)
Levine, Harry; Bluvstein, Dolev; Keesling, Alexander; Wang, Tout T; Ebadi, Sepehr; Semeghini, Giulia; Omran, Ahmed; Greiner, Markus; Vuletić, Vladan; Lukin, Mikhail D; ... Show more Show less
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Show full item recordAbstract
Hyperfine atomic states are among the most promising candidates for qubit
encoding in quantum information processing. In atomic systems, hyperfine
transitions are typically driven through a two-photon Raman process by a laser
field which is amplitude modulated at the hyperfine qubit frequency. Here, we
introduce a new method for generating amplitude modulation by phase modulating
a laser and reflecting it from a highly dispersive optical element known as a
chirped Bragg grating (CBG). This approach is passively stable, offers high
efficiency, and is compatible with high-power laser sources, enabling large
Rabi frequencies and improved quantum coherence. We benchmark this new approach
by globally driving an array of $\sim 300$ neutral $^{87}$Rb atomic qubits
trapped in optical tweezers, and obtain Rabi frequencies of 2 MHz with
photon-scattering error rates of $< 2 \times 10^{-4}$ per $\pi$-pulse. This
robust approach can be directly integrated with local addressing optics in both
neutral atom and trapped ion systems to facilitate high-fidelity single-qubit
operations for quantum information processing.
Date issued
2022-03-29Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Research Laboratory of ElectronicsJournal
Physical Review A
Publisher
American Physical Society (APS)
Citation
Levine, Harry, Bluvstein, Dolev, Keesling, Alexander, Wang, Tout T, Ebadi, Sepehr et al. 2022. "Dispersive optical systems for scalable Raman driving of hyperfine qubits." Physical Review A, 105 (3).
Version: Final published version