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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing

An Improved Bound on Nonlinear Quantum Mechanics using a Cryogenic Radio Frequency Experiment

arXiv
Authors: Oleksandr Melnychuk, Bianca Giaccone, Nicholas Bornman, Raphael Cervantes, Anna Grassellino, Roni Harnik, David E. Kaplan, Geev Nahal, Roman Pilipenko, Sam Posen, Surjeet Rajendran, Alexander O. Sushkov

Year

2024

Paper ID

36754

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

185

Citations

N/A

Abstract

There are strong arguments that quantum mechanics may be nonlinear in its dynamics. A discovery of nonlinearity would hint at a novel understanding of the interplay between gravity and quantum field theory, for example. As such, experiments searching for potential nonlinear effects in the electromagnetic sector are important. Here we outline such an experiment, consisting of a stream of random bits (which were generated using Rigetti's Aspen-M-3 chip) as input to an RF signal generator coupled to a cryogenic detector. Projective measurements of the qubit state, which is originally prepared in an equal superposition, serve as the random binary output of a signal generator. Thereafter, spectral analysis of the RF detector would yield a detectable excess signal predicted to arise from such a nonlinear effect. A comparison between the projective measurements of the quantum bits vs the classical baseline showed no power excess. This sets a new limit on the electromagnetic nonlinearity parameter |ε| lessapprox 1.15 times 10-12, at a 90.0% confidence level. This is the most stringent limit on nonlinear quantum mechanics thus far and an improvement by nearly a factor of 50 over the previous experimental limit.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2024 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • There are strong arguments that quantum mechanics may be nonlinear in its dynamics.

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