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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Quantum Simulation
Tunable spin-spin interactions and entanglement of ions in separate wells
arXiv
Authors: Andrew C. Wilson, Yves Colombe, Kenton R. Brown, Emanuel Knill, Dietrich Leibfried, David J. Wineland
Year
2014
Paper ID
8222
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
189
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Quantum simulation - the use of one quantum system to simulate a less controllable one - may provide an understanding of the many quantum systems which cannot be modeled using classical computers. Impressive progress on control and manipulation has been achieved for various quantum systems, but one of the remaining challenges is the implementation of scalable devices. In this regard, individual ions trapped in separate tunable potential wells are promising. Here we implement the basic features of this approach and demonstrate deterministic tuning of the Coulomb interaction between two ions, independently controlling their local wells. The scheme is suitable for emulating a range of spin-spin interactions, but to characterize the performance of our setup we select one that entangles the internal states of the two ions with 0.82(1) fidelity. Extension of this building-block to a 2D-network, which ion-trap micro-fabrication processes enable, may provide a new quantum simulator architecture with broad flexibility in designing and scaling the arrangement of ions and their mutual interactions. To perform useful quantum simulations, including those of intriguing condensed-matter phenomena such as the fractional quantum Hall effect, an array of tens of ions might be sufficient.
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- This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- Quantum simulation - the use of one quantum system to simulate a less controllable one - may provide an understanding of the many quantum systems which cannot be modeled using...
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