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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Continuous drive heterodyne microwave sensing with spin qubits in hexagonal boron nitride
arXiv
Authors: Charlie J. Patrickson, Valentin Haemmerli, Shi Guo, Andrew J. Ramsay, Isaac J. Luxmoore
Year
2024
Paper ID
66137
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
217
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Quantum sensors that use solid state spin defects have emerged as effective probes of weak alternating magnetic signals. By recording the phase of a signal relative to an external clock, these devices can resolve signal frequencies to a precision orders of magnitude longer than the spin state lifetime. However, these quantum heterodyne protocols suffer from sub-optimal sensitivity, as they are currently limited to pulsed spin control techniques, which are susceptible to cumulative pulse-area errors, or single continuous drives which offer no protection of the spin coherence. Here, we present a control scheme based on a continuous microwave drive that extends spin coherence towards the effective T2 approx frac{1}{2}T1 limit and can resolve the frequency, amplitude and phase of GHz magnetic fields. The scheme is demonstrated using an ensemble of boron vacancies in hexagonal boron nitride, and achieves an amplitude sensitivity of ηapprox 3-5 mathrm{μT sqrt{Hz}} and phase sensitivity of η_φ approx 0.076 mathrm{rads sqrt{Hz}}. By repeatedly referencing the phase of a resonant signal against the coherent continuous microwave drive in a quantum heterodyne demonstration, we measure a GHz signal with a resolution <1 Hz over a 10 s measurement. Achieving this level of performance in a two-dimensional material platform could have broad applications, from probing nanoscale condensed matter systems to integration into heterostructures for quantum networking.
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.
- Quantum sensors that use solid state spin defects have emerged as effective probes of weak alternating magnetic signals.
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