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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing Quantum Simulation

Narrow-line cooling and imaging of Ytterbium atoms in an optical tweezer array

arXiv
Authors: Samuel Saskin, Jack Wilson, Brandon Grinkemeyer, Jeff Thompson

Year

2018

Paper ID

23825

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

211

Citations

N/A

Abstract

Engineering controllable, strongly interacting many-body quantum systems is at the frontier of quantum simulation and quantum information processing. Arrays of laser-cooled neutral atoms in optical tweezers have emerged as a promising platform, because of their flexibility and the potential for strong interactions via Rydberg states. Existing neutral atom array experiments utilize alkali atoms, but alkaline-earth atoms offer many advantages in terms of coherence and control, and also open the door to new applications in precision measurement and timekeeping. In this work, we present a technique to trap individual alkaline-earth-like Ytterbium (Yb) atoms in optical tweezer arrays. The narrow 1S0-3P1 intercombination line is used for both cooling and imaging in a magic-wavelength optical tweezer at 532 nm. The low Doppler temperature allows for imaging near the saturation intensity, resulting in a very high atom detection fidelity. We demonstrate the imaging fidelity concretely by observing rare $<$ 1 in $104$ images spontaneous quantum jumps into and out of a metastable state. We also demonstrate stochastic loading of atoms into a two-dimensional, 144-site tweezer array. This platform will enable advances in quantum information processing, quantum simulation and precision measurement. The demonstrated narrow-line Doppler imaging may also be applied in tweezer arrays or quantum gas microscopes using other atoms with similar transitions, such as Erbium and Dysprosium.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2018 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • Engineering controllable, strongly interacting many-body quantum systems is at the frontier of quantum simulation and quantum information processing.

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