Atomic ions can be isolated from their environment through laser-cooling and trapping, making them useful for quantum information processing, measurement, and sensing. A variety of atomic ion species have been used as qubits. Hyperfine qubits with nuclear spin I = 1/2 have demonstrated the long qubit coherence times with simple, robust laser manipulation. Other qubits (I ≠ 1/2) have easily-prepared, long-lived metastable electronic excited states, and simple discrimination between these states allows high fidelity readout. However, none of the naturally- occurring, atomic ions with nuclear spin I = 1/2 have these excited states that are simultaneously long-lived and easy to prepare. We demonstrate loading, cooling, and qubit manipulation of an artificial, I = 1/2 species of barium with visible wavelength lasers: 133Ba+. We achieved a single shot qubit state preparation and readout fidelity of F = 0.9997, the lowest error rate ever achieved by any qubit on any platform.
We present two novel approaches to state detection of qubits defined with trapped ions. The first uses simple pulse sequences from a mode-locked laser to induce state-dependent excitations in less than 1 ns. The resulting atomic fluorescence occurs in the dark, allowing the placement of non-imaging detectors right next to the atom to improve the qubit state detection efficiency and speed.The second employs the long lived F state in Yb+ which has been used in quantum information science almost exclusively for clocks and optical-frequency qubits. We describe how this resource can be used in conjunction with the ground state S1/2 manifold to aid in the scaling of trapped ion quantum information science. Narrow-band optical pumping into the 2F7/2 from one of the conventional 2S1/2 qubit states is projected to achieve a higher state preparation and measurement (SPAM) fidelity than any other demonstrated technique.
Conference Committee Involvement (8)
Quantum Information Science, Sensing, and Computation XVII
14 April 2025 | Orlando, Florida, United States
Quantum Information Science, Sensing, and Computation XVI
22 April 2024 | National Harbor, Maryland, United States
Quantum Information Science, Sensing, and Computation XV
3 May 2023 | Orlando, Florida, United States
Quantum Information Science, Sensing, and Computation XIV
6 April 2022 | Orlando, Florida, United States
Quantum Information Science, Sensing, and Computation XIII
12 April 2021 | Online Only, Florida, United States
Quantum Information Science, Sensing, and Computation XII
27 April 2020 | Online Only, California, United States
Quantum Information Science, Sensing, and Computation XI
18 April 2019 | Baltimore, MD, United States
Quantum Information Science, Sensing, and Computation X
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.