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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Auxiliary-state facilitated phase synchronization phenomena in isolated spin systems
arXiv
Authors: Xylo Molenda, S. Zhong, B. Viswanathan, Xingli Li, Y. Yan, A. M. Marino, D. Blume
Year
2025
Paper ID
17787
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
233
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Extending classical synchronization to the quantum domain is of great interest both from the fundamental physics point of view and with a view toward quantum technology applications. This work characterizes phase synchronization of an effective spin-1 system, which is realized by coupling three quantum states with infinite lifetime to auxiliary excited states that have a finite lifetime. Integrating out the excited states, the effective spin-1 model features coherent and incoherent effective couplings. Our key findings are: (i) Phase synchronization can be controlled by adjusting the phases of the couplings to the excited states. (ii) Unlike in the paradigmatic spin-1 system studied in the literature, where the dissipative couplings describe decay into the limit cycle state, the effective spin-1 model investigated in this work is governed by a competition between dissipative decay into and out of the limit cycle state, with the dissipative decay out of the limit cycle state playing a critical role. (iii) We identify a parameter regime where phase synchronization of the effective spin-1 system is - in the absence of coherent effective couplings - governed entirely by the effective dissipators. The effective spin-1 model is benchmarked through comparisons with master equation calculations for the full Hilbert space. Physical insights are gained through analytical perturbation theory calculations. Our findings, which are expected to hold for a broad class of energy level and coupling schemes, are demonstrated using hyperfine states of 87Rb.
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- This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- Extending classical synchronization to the quantum domain is of great interest both from the fundamental physics point of view and with a view toward quantum technology...
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