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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Superconducting Qubits
Ultrasensitive force and displacement detection using trapped ions
arXiv
Authors: M. J. Biercuk, H. Uys, J. W. Britton, A. P. VanDevender, J. J. Bollinger
Year
2010
Paper ID
9050
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
240
Citations
N/A
Abstract
The ability to detect extremely small forces is vital for a variety of disciplines including precision spin-resonance imaging, microscopy, and tests of fundamental physical phenomena. Current force-detection sensitivity limits have surpassed 1 aN/sqrt{Hz} atto $=10-18$ through coupling of micro or nanofabricated mechanical resonators to a variety of physical systems including single-electron transistors, superconducting microwave cavities, and individual spins. These experiments have allowed for probing studies of a variety of phenomena, but sensitivity requirements are ever-increasing as new regimes of physical interactions are considered. Here we show that trapped atomic ions are exquisitely sensitive force detectors, with a measured sensitivity more than three orders of magnitude better than existing reports. We demonstrate detection of forces as small as 174 yN yocto $=10-24$, with a sensitivity 390pm150 yN/sqrt{Hz} using crystals of n=60 9Be+ ions in a Penning trap. Our technique is based on the excitation of normal motional modes in an ion trap by externally applied electric fields, detection via and phase-coherent Doppler velocimetry, which allows for the discrimination of ion motion with amplitudes on the scale of nanometers. These experimental results and extracted force-detection sensitivities in the single-ion limit validate proposals suggesting that trapped atomic ions are capable of detecting of forces with sensitivity approaching 1 yN/sqrt{Hz}. We anticipate that this demonstration will be strongly motivational for the development of a new class of deployable trapped-ion-based sensors, and will permit scientists to access new regimes in materials science.
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- The ability to detect extremely small forces is vital for a variety of disciplines including precision spin-resonance imaging, microscopy, and tests of fundamental physical...
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