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Search Publications by: David J. Wineland (Assoc)

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Displaying 76 - 100 of 242

Transport quantum logic gates for trapped ions

September 21, 2007
Author(s)
Dietrich G. Leibfried, Emanuel H. Knill, Christian Ospelkaus, David J. Wineland
Many efforts are currently underway to build a device capable of large scale quantum information processing (QIP). While QIP has been demonstrated for a few qubits in several systems, severe difficulties have to be overcome in order to construct a large

Simplified motional heating rate measurements of trapped ions

September 19, 2007
Author(s)
Ryan Epstein, Signe Seidelin, Dietrich G. Leibfried, Janus Wesenberg, John J. Bollinger, Jason Amini, Brad R. Blakestad, Joseph W. Britton, Jonathan Home, Wayne M. Itano, John D. Jost, Emanuel H. Knill, C. Langer, R. Ozeri, Nobuyasu Shiga, David J. Wineland
We measure motional heating rates of trapped atomic ions, a factor that influences multi-ion quantum logic gate fidelities. Two simplified techniques are developed for this purpose: one relies on Raman sideband detection implemented with a single laser

Frequency Comparison of Al + and Hg + Optical Standards

June 24, 2007
Author(s)
Till P. Rosenband, David Hume, Anders Brusch, Luca Lorini, P. O. Schmidt, Tara M. Fortier, Jason Stalnaker, Scott A. Diddams, Nathan R. Newbury, W Swann, Windell Oskay, Wayne M. Itano, David J. Wineland, James C. Bergquist
We compare the frequencies of two single ion frequency standards: 27Al + and 199Hg +. Systematic fractional frequency uncertainties of both standards are below 10 -16, and the statistical measurement uncertainty is below 5 x 10 -17. Recent ratio

Towards scaling up trapped ion quantum information processing

June 19, 2007
Author(s)
Dietrich G. Leibfried, David J. Wineland, Brad R. Blakestad, John J. Bollinger, Joseph W. Britton, J Chiaverini, Ryan Epstein, Wayne M. Itano, John D. Jost, Emanuel H. Knill, C. Langer, R Ozeri, Rainer Reichle, Signe Seidelin, Nobuyasu Shiga, Janus Wesenberg
Recent theoretical advances have identifed several computational algorithms that can be implemented utilizing quantum information processing (QIP), which gives an exponential speedup over the corresponding (known) algorithms on conventional computers. QIP

Observation of the 1 S 0 - 3 P 0 clock transition in 27 Al +

June 1, 2007
Author(s)
Till P. Rosenband, P. O. Schmidt, David Hume, Wayne M. Itano, Tara M. Fortier, Jason Stalnaker, Scott A. Diddams, Jeroen Koelemeij, James C. Bergquist, David J. Wineland
We report for the first time, laser spectroscopy of the 1S 0 – 3P 0 clock transition in 27Al +. A single aluminum ion and a single beryllium ion are simultaneously confined in a linear Paul trap, coupled by their mutual Coulomb repulsion. This coupling

Errors in trapped-ion quantum gates due to spontaneous photon scattering

April 27, 2007
Author(s)
R Ozeri, Wayne M. Itano, Brad R. Blakestad, Joseph W. Britton, J Chiaverini, John D. Jost, C. Langer, Dietrich G. Leibfried, Rainer Reichle, Signe Seidelin, Janus Wesenberg, David J. Wineland
We analyze the error in trapped-ion, hyperfine qubit, quantum gates due to spontaneous scattering of photons from the gate laser beams. We investigate the error in single-ion-qubit rotations that are based on stimulated Raman transitions and in two-ion

Randomized Benchmarking of Quantum Gates

January 1, 2007
Author(s)
Emanuel Knill, D. Leibfried, R. Reichle, J. Britton, R. B. Blakestad, J. D. Jost, C. Langer, R Ozeri, Signe Seidelin, David J. Wineland
A key requirement for scalable quantum computing is that elementary quantum gates can be implemented with sufficiently low error. One method for determining the error behavior of a gate implementation is to perform process tomography. However, standard

Experimental purification of two-atom entanglement

October 19, 2006
Author(s)
Rainer Reichle, Dietrich G. Leibfried, Emanuel H. Knill, Joseph W. Britton, Brad R. Blakestad, John D. Jost, C. Langer, R Ozeri, Signe Seidelin, David J. Wineland
Entanglement is one of the most counterintuitive features of quantum mechanics. It is a necessary resource for quantum communication and quantum information processing. Entanglement established between different locations enables private communication and

Transport dynamics of single ions in segmented microstructured Paul trap arrays

August 4, 2006
Author(s)
Rainer Reichle, Dietrich G. Leibfried, Brad R. Blakestad, Joseph W. Britton, John D. Jost, Emanuel H. Knill, C. Langer, R Ozeri, Signe Seidelin, David J. Wineland
It was recently proposed to use small groups of trapped ions as qubit carriers in miniaturized electrode arrays that comprise a large number of individual trapping zones, between which ions could be moved. This approach might be scalable for quantum

Trapped atomic ions and quantum information processing

July 16, 2006
Author(s)
David J. Wineland, Dietrich G. Leibfried, James C. Bergquist, Brad R. Blakestad, John J. Bollinger, Joseph W. Britton, J Chiaverini, Ryan Epstein, David Hume, Wayne M. Itano, John D. Jost, Emanuel H. Knill, Jeroen Koelemeij, C. Langer, R Ozeri, Rainer Reichle, Till P. Rosenband, Tobias Schaetz, Piet Schmidt, Signe Seidelin, Nobuyasu Shiga, Janus Wesenberg
The basic requirements for quantum computing and quantum simulation (Single- and multi-qubit gates, long memor times, etc.)have been demonstrated in separate experiments on trapped ions. Construction of a large-scale information processor will require

A Microfabricated Surface-Electrode Ion Trap for Scalable Quantum Information Processing

June 30, 2006
Author(s)
Signe Seidelin, J Chiaverini, Rainer Reichle, John J. Bollinger, Dietrich G. Leibfried, Joseph W. Britton, Janus Wesenberg, Brad R. Blakestad, John D. Jost, David Hume, C. Langer, R Ozeri, Nobuyasu Shiga, David J. Wineland
We demonstrate confinement of individual atomic ions in an RF Paul trap with novel geometry where the electrodes are located in a single plane and the ions confined above this plane. This device is realized with a simple fabrication procedure and has

A Microfabricated Surface-Electrode Ion Trap for Scalable Quantum Information Processing

June 30, 2006
Author(s)
Signe Seidelin, J Chiaverini, Rainer Reichle, John J. Bollinger, Dietrich G. Leibfried, Joseph W. Britton, Janus Wesenberg, Brad R. Blakestad, John D. Jost, David Hume, C. Langer, R Ozeri, Nobuyasu Shiga, David J. Wineland
We demonstrate confinement of individual atomic ions in an RF Paul trap with novel geometry where the electrodes are located in a single plane and the ions confined above this plane. This device is realized with a simple fabrication procedure and has

Spectroscopy of atomic and molecular ions using quantum logic

June 25, 2006
Author(s)
Piet Schmidt, Till P. Rosenband, Jeroen Koelemeij, David Hume, Wayne M. Itano, James C. Bergquist, David J. Wineland
Recently developed techniques for quantum computation using trapped ions allow unprecedented coherent control of the internal and external states of single atoms. Here we report how these techniques can be employed to perform precision spectroscopy of

Recent experiments in trapped-ion quantum information processing at NIST

May 1, 2006
Author(s)
J Chiaverini, Matthew P. Barrett, Brad R. Blakestad, Joseph W. Britton, Wayne M. Itano, John D. Jost, Emanuel H. Knill, C. Langer, Dietrich G. Leibfried, R Ozeri, T Schaetz, David J. Wineland
Atomic ions confined in segmented trap arrays provide a system for quantum information processing. We report on the execution of two simple quantum algorithms, quantum error correction and the quantum Fourier transform, using this implementation. The

Recent experiments in trapped-ion quantum information processing at NIST

May 1, 2006
Author(s)
J Chiaverini, Murray D. Barrett, Brad R. Blakestad, Joseph W. Britton, Wayne M. Itano, John D. Jost, Emanuel H. Knill, C. Langer, Dietrich G. Leibfried, R Ozeri, Tobias Schaetz, David J. Wineland
Atomic ions confined in segmented trap arrays provide a system for quantum information processing. We report on the execution of two simple quantum algorithms, quantum error correction and the quantum Fourier transform, using this implementation. The

Blackbody radiation shift of the 27 Al + 1 S 0 - 3 P 0 transition

March 27, 2006
Author(s)
Till P. Rosenband, Wayne M. Itano, Piet Schmidt, David Hume, Jeroen Koelemeij, James C. Bergquist, David J. Wineland
The differential polarizability, due to near-infrared light at 1126 nm, of the 27Al + 1S 0 – 3P 0 transition is measured to be {Δ}α = (1.6 ± x 10 -31 m 3, where {Δ}α = α P - α S is the difference between the excited and ground state polarizabilities. This

Trapped Atomic Ions and Quantum Information Processing

January 1, 2006
Author(s)
David J. Wineland, Dietrich G. Leibfried, James C. Bergquist, R B. Blakestad, John J. Bollinger, Joseph W. Britton, J Chiaverini, Ryan Epstein, David Hume, Wayne M. Itano, John D. Jost, E Knill, Jeroen Koelemeij, Christopher Langer, R Ozeri, Rainer Reichle, Till P. Rosenband, T Schaetz, Piet Schmidt, Signe Seidelin, Nobuyasu Shiga, Janus Wesenberg

Creation of a six-atom Schrodinger cat state

December 1, 2005
Author(s)
Dietrich G. Leibfried, Emanuel H. Knill, Signe Seidelin, Joseph W. Britton, Brad R. Blakestad, J Chiaverini, David Hume, Wayne M. Itano, John D. Jost, C. Langer, R Ozeri, Rainer Reichle, David J. Wineland
Among highly entangled states of multiple quantum systems, Schrödinger cat states are particularly useful. Cat states are equal superpositions of two maximally different quantum states. They are a fundamental resource in fault-tolerant quantum computing