0000000000305285

AUTHOR

Philipp Schindler

showing 3 related works from this author

Cryogenic setup for trapped ion quantum computing

2016

We report on the design of a cryogenic setup for trapped ion quantum computing containing a segmented surface electrode trap. The heat shield of our cryostat is designed to attenuate alternating magnetic field noise, resulting in 120~dB reduction of 50~Hz noise along the magnetic field axis. We combine this efficient magnetic shielding with high optical access required for single ion addressing as well as for efficient state detection by placing two lenses each with numerical aperture 0.23 inside the inner heat shield. The cryostat design incorporates vibration isolation to avoid decoherence of optical qubits due to the motion of the cryostat. We measure vibrations of the cryostat of less t…

PhysicsCryostatQuantum PhysicsQuantum decoherenceAtomic Physics (physics.atom-ph)Physics::Instrumentation and DetectorsFOS: Physical sciences01 natural sciencesNoise (electronics)Magnetic fieldNumerical apertureIonPhysics - Atomic Physics010309 opticsEngineeringQubitPhysical SciencesChemical Sciences0103 physical sciencesElectromagnetic shieldingAtomic physics010306 general physicsQuantum Physics (quant-ph)InstrumentationApplied Physics
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Implications of surface noise for the motional coherence of trapped ions

2016

Electric noise from metallic surfaces is a major obstacle towards quantum applications with trapped ions due to motional heating of the ions. Here, we discuss how the same noise source can also lead to pure dephasing of motional quantum states. The mechanism is particularly relevant at small ion-surface distances, thus imposing a new constraint on trap miniaturization. By means of a free induction decay experiment, we measure the dephasing time of the motion of a single ion trapped 50~$\mu$m above a Cu-Al surface. From the dephasing times we extract the integrated noise below the secular frequency of the ion. We find that none of the most commonly discussed surface noise models for ion trap…

PhysicsGeneral PhysicsQuantum PhysicsAtomic Physics (physics.atom-ph)DephasingQuantum noiseFOS: Physical sciences02 engineering and technology021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesMathematical SciencesIonPhysics - Atomic PhysicsFree induction decayQuantum state0103 physical sciencesPhysical SciencesChemical SciencesMiniaturizationAtomic physicsQuantum Physics (quant-ph)010306 general physics0210 nano-technologyQuantumCoherence (physics)
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Assessing the progress of trapped-ion processors towards fault-tolerant quantum computation

2017

41 pags., 32 figs., 7 tabs. -- Open Access funded by Creative Commons Atribution Licence 4.0

Quantum PhysicsComputer sciencebusiness.industryPhysicsQC1-999Electrical engineeringGeneral Physics and AstronomyFOS: Physical sciencesCreative commons01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmas0103 physical sciencesQuantum InformationQuantum information010306 general physicsbusinessQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Fault tolerant quantum computation
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