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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Superconducting Qubits
On-chip coherent microwave-to-optical transduction mediated by ytterbium in YVO4
arXiv
Authors: John G. Bartholomew, Jake Rochman, Tian Xie, Jonathan M. Kindem, Andrei Ruskuc, Ioana Craiciu, Mi Lei, Andrei Faraon
Year
2019
Paper ID
40061
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
147
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Optical networks that distribute entanglement among quantum technologies will form a powerful backbone for quantum science but are yet to interface with leading quantum hardware such as superconducting qubits. Consequently, these systems remain isolated because microwave links at room temperature are noisy and lossy. Building connectivity requires interfaces that map quantum information between microwave and optical fields. While preliminary microwave-to-optical (M2O) transducers have been realized, developing efficient, low-noise devices that match superconducting qubit frequencies (gigahertz) and bandwidths (10 kHz - 1 MHz) remains a challenge. Here we demonstrate a proof-of-concept on-chip M2O transducer using 171Yb3+-ions in yttrium orthovanadate (YVO) coupled to a nanophotonic waveguide and a microwave transmission line. The device's miniaturization, material, and zero-magnetic-field operation are important advances for rare-earth ion magneto-optical devices. Further integration with high quality factor microwave and optical resonators will enable efficient transduction and create opportunities toward multi-platform quantum networks.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- Optical networks that distribute entanglement among quantum technologies will form a powerful backbone for quantum science but are yet to interface with leading quantum...
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