6533b85ffe1ef96bd12c25ee
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Experimental benchmarking of quantum control in zero-field nuclear magnetic resonance
Dmitry BudkerDmitry BudkerJohn W. BlanchardGuanru FengXinhua PengXinhua PengMin JiangMin JiangTeng Wusubject
Atomic Physics (physics.atom-ph)FOS: Physical sciencesQuantum simulator02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesPhysics - Atomic PhysicsNuclear magnetic resonanceControlled NOT gatePhysics - Chemical Physics0103 physical sciencesQuantum metrology010306 general physicsSpin (physics)Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph)Larmor precessionPhysicsQuantum PhysicsMultidisciplinarySpins500Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electronsddc:500Quantum Physics (quant-ph)0210 nano-technologyRealization (systems)description
Zero-field nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) provides complementary analysis modalities to those of high-field NMR and allows for ultra-high-resolution spectroscopy and measurement of untruncated spin-spin interactions. Unlike for the high-field case, however, universal quantum control -- the ability to perform arbitrary unitary operations -- has not been experimentally demonstrated in zero-field NMR. This is because the Larmor frequency for all spins is identically zero at zero field, making it challenging to individually address different spin species. We realize a composite-pulse technique for arbitrary independent rotations of $^1$H and $^{13}$C spins in a two-spin system. Quantum-information-inspired randomized benchmarking and state tomography are used to evaluate the quality of the control. We experimentally demonstrate single-spin control for $^{13}$C with an average gate fidelity of $0.9960(2)$ and two-spin control via a controlled-not (CNOT) gate with an estimated fidelity of $0.99$. The combination of arbitrary single-spin gates and a CNOT gate is sufficient for universal quantum control of the nuclear spin system. The realization of complete spin control in zero-field NMR is an essential step towards applications to quantum simulation, entangled-state-assisted quantum metrology, and zero-field NMR spectroscopy.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-08-21 |