Result

Entanglement of nanoelectromechanical oscillators by Cooper-pair tunneling

Date: 
2013-07-26 - 2014-10-23
Author(s): 

Stefan Walter, Jan Carl Budich, Jens Eisert, and Björn Trauzettel

Reference: 

Phys. Rev. B 88, 035441 (2013); DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.88.035441

QUTE-EUROPE Summer School, QESS 2015

Date: 
2015-06-21 - 2015-06-27
Registration deadline: 
2015-01-16 (All day)
Place: 
Hindåsgården, Hindås, Sweden

 

Quantum Simulation and Computation: From fundamentals to applications and implementations

 

June 21-27, 2015, Hindåsgården, Hindås, Sweden

Ideal negative measurements in quantum walks disprove theories based on classical trajectories

Date: 
2015-01-20
Author(s): 

Carsten Robens, Wolfgang Alt, Dieter Meschede, Clive Emary, Andrea Alberti

Reference: 

Phys. Rev. X 5, 011003 (2015)

We report on a stringent test of the nonclassicality of the motion of a massive quantum particle, which propagates on a discrete lattice. Measuring temporal correlations of the position of single atoms performing a quantum walk, we observe a $6\sigma$ violation of the Leggett-Garg inequality. Our results rigorously excludes (i.e., falsifies) any explanation of quantum transport based on classical, well-defined trajectories.

Decoherence Models for Discrete-Time Quantum Walks and their Application to Neutral Atom Experiments

Date: 
2014-12-19
Author(s): 

Andrea Alberti, Wolfgang Alt, Reinhard Werner, Dieter Meschede

Reference: 

New J. Phys. 16, 123052 (2014)

We discuss decoherence in discrete-time quantum walks in terms of a phenomenological model that distinguishes spin and spatial decoherence. We identify the dominating mechanisms that affect quantum-walk experiments realized with neutral atoms walking in an optical lattice.

Carrier-free Raman manipulation of trapped neutral atoms

Date: 
2014-10-21
Author(s): 

René Reimann, Wolfgang Alt, Tobias Macha, Dieter Meschede, Natalie Thau, Seokchan Yoon, Lothar Ratschbacher

Reference: 

New J. Phys. 16 113042

We experimentally realize an enhanced Raman control scheme for neutral atoms that features an intrinsic suppression of the two-photon carrier transition, but retains the sidebands which couple to the external degrees of freedom of the trapped atoms. This is achieved by trapping the atom at the node of a blue detuned standing wave dipole trap, that acts as one field for the two-photon Raman coupling. The improved ratio between cooling and heating processes in this configuration enables a five times lower fundamental temperature limit for resolved sideband cooling.

QUTE-EUROPE contribution to FET public consultation

Summary: 

QUTE-EUROPE submitted a position document titled "Quantum Technologies in H2020" to the recently launched FET public consultation.

As many of you probably know, the EC has launched an online consultation to identify game-changing directions for future research in FET related technological domains. The purpose of this consultation is to initiate thinking about future proactive initiatives to be included in the next FET workprogramme for 2016 and 2017.

Quantum error correction in a solid-state hybrid spin register

Date: 
2014-02-13
Author(s): 

G. Waldherr, Y. Wang, S. Zaiser, M. Jamali, T. Schulte-Herbrüggen, H. Abe, T. Ohshima, J. Isoya, J.F. Du, P. Neumann, J. Wrachtrup

Reference: 

Nature 506, 204 (2014)

Error correction is important in classical and quantum computation. Decoherence caused by the inevitable interaction of quantum bits with their environment leads to dephasing or even relaxation. Correction of the concomitant errors is therefore a fundamental requirement for scalable quantum computation. Although algorithms for error correction have been known for some time, experimental realizations are scarce. Here we show quantum error correction in a heterogeneous, solid-state spin system.

Homodyne Tomography of a Single Photon Retrieved on Demand from a Cavity-Enhanced Cold Atom Memory

Date: 
2014-01-21
Author(s): 

Erwan Bimbard, Rajiv Boddeda, Nicolas Vitrant, Andrey Grankin, Valentina Parigi, Jovica Stanojevic, Alexei Ourjoumtsev, and Philippe Grangier

Reference: 

Bimbard, R. Boddeda, N. Vitrant, A. Grankin, V. Parigi, J. Stanojevic, A. Ourjoumtsev, P. Grangier, Homodyne Tomography of a Single Photon Retrieved on Demand from a Cavity-Enhanced Cold Atom Memory, PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 112:3, 033601 (2014)
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.033601

We experimentally demonstrate that a nonclassical state prepared in an atomic memory can be efficiently transferred to a single mode of free-propagating light. By retrieving on demand a single excitation from a cold atomic gas, we realize an efficient source of single photons prepared in a pure, fully controlled quantum state. We characterize this source using two detection methods, one based on photon-counting analysis and the second using homodyne tomography to reconstruct the density matrix and Wigner function of the state.

Interfacing GHz-bandwidth heralded single photons with a room-temperature Raman quantum memory

Date: 
2014-05-27
Author(s): 

P. S. Michelberger, T. F. M. Champion, M. R. Sprague, K. T. Kaczmarek, M. Barbieri, X. M. Jin, D. G. England, W. S. Kolthammer, D. J. Saunders, J. Nunn, I. A. Walmsley

Reference: 

quant-ph > arXiv:1405.1470

Photonics is a promising platform for quantum technologies. However, photon sources and two-photon gates currently only operate probabilistically. Large-scale photonic processing will therefore be impossible without a multiplexing strategy to actively select successful events.

Broadband single-photon-level memory in a hollow-core photonic crystal fibre

Date: 
2014-05-26
Author(s): 

M. R. Sprague, P. S. Michelberger, T. F. M. Champion, D. G. England, J. Nunn, X.-M. Jin, W. S. Kolthammer, A. Abdolvand, P. St. J. Russell & I. A. Walmsley

Reference: 

Nature Photonics 8, 287–291 (2014)

doi:10.1038/nphoton.2014.45

Storing information encoded in light is critical for realizing optical buffers for all-optical signal processing

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