21 |
Near-field microwave addressing of trapped-ion qubits for scalable quantum computationCraik, Diana Prado Lopes Aude January 2016 (has links)
This thesis reports high-fidelity near-field spatial microwave addressing of long-lived <sup>43</sup>Ca<sup>+</sup> "atomic clock" qubits performed in a two-zone single-layer surface-electrode ion trap. Addressing is implemented by using two of the trap's integrated microwave electrodes, one in each zone, to drive single-qubit rotations in the zone we choose to address whilst interferometrically cancelling the microwave field at the neighbour (non-addressed) zone. Using this field-nulling scheme, we measure a Rabi frequency ratio between addressed and non-addressed zones of up to 1400, from which we calculate an addressing error (or a spin-flip probability on the qubit transition) of 1e-6. Off-resonant excitation out of the qubit state is a more significant source of error in this experiment, but we also demonstrate polarisation control of the microwave field at an error level of 2e-5, which, if combined with individual-ion addressing, would be sufficient to suppress off-resonant excitation errors to the 1e-9 level. Further, this thesis presents preliminary results obtained with a micron-scale coupled-microstrip differential antenna probe that can be scanned over an ion-trap chip to map microwave magnetic near fields. The probe is designed to enable the measurement of fields at tens of microns above electrode surfaces and to act as an effective characterisation tool, speeding up design-fabrication-characterisation cycles in the production of new prototype microwave ion-trap chips. Finally, a new multi-layer design for an ion-trap chip which displays, in simulations, a 100-fold improvement in addressing performance, is presented. The chip electrode structure is designed to use the cancelling effect of microwave return currents to produce Rabi frequency ratios of order 1000 between trap zones using a single microwave electrode (i.e. without the need for nulling fields). If realised, this chip could be used to drive individually addressed single-qubit operations on arrays of memory qubits in parallel and with high fidelity.
|
22 |
Trapping, laser cooling, and spectroscopy of Thorium IVCampbell, Corey Justin 07 July 2012 (has links)
Application of precision laser spectroscopy and optical clock technology to the ground and metastable, first excited state of the ²²⁹Th nucleus at < 10 eV has significant potential for use in optical frequency metrology and tests of variation of fundamental constants. This work is a report on the development of required technologies to realize such a nuclear optical clock with a single, trapped, laser cooled ²²⁹Th³⁺ ion. Creation, trapping, laser cooling, and precision spectroscopy are developed and refined first with the naturally occurring isotope, ²³²Th. These technologies are then extended to laser cooling and precision laser spectroscopy of the electronic structure of ²²⁹Th³⁺. An efficient optical excitation search protocol to directly observe this transition via the electron bridge is proposed. The extraordinarily small systematic clock shifts are estimated and the likely extraordinarily large sensitivity of the clock to variation of the fine structure constant is discussed.
|
23 |
One and two point micro-rheology of hard sphere suspensionsHarrison, Andrew William January 2011 (has links)
The material that is covered in this thesis concerns the calibration and application of a set of optical tweezers to be used for one- and two-point micro-rheology experiments on hard sphere colloidal suspensions. The colloidal suspensions that were used in this study were all quasi-monodisperse density- and refractive index-matched PMMA particles that had a radii, a = 0:90 ± 0:05μm or a = 0:86 ± 0:07 for one-point microrheology experiments and radii a = 0:90 ± 0:05μm or a = 0:133 ± 0:010μm for the two-point micro-rheology experiments. By collecting the forward scattered light from a single optically trapped particle the particle's displacements in time were used to determine passive microviscosity, η(Passive) μ , for colloidal suspension in the range of 0:10 < Ø < 0:57 and comparison with literature data has been made and agreement found. Actively dragging an optically trapped particle through suspensions with volume fractions of the same range has yielded the active microviscosities, η(Active) μ , for both high and low shear regimes, displaying shear thinning behaviour. Comparison to literature data has been made and agreement found as well. Collecting the forward scattered light from two optically trapped particles has been used to determine the cross-correlated motion of the two particles in bare solvent and in suspensions with volume fraction Ø = 0:02. The friction coefficients ξ1;1 and ξ1;2 were extracted from the cross-correlated motion of the particles and agreement was found with theoretical predictions for bare solvent only. The suspensions with volume fraction Ø = 0:02 were found to have a friction coefficient ξ1;1 that was greater than what theory predicted with the suspension with bath particles a = 0:90 ± 0:05μm had the greater magnitude. The magnitude ξ1;2 was found to decrease for the suspension with bath particles of radius a = 0:133 ± 0:010μm and to increase for the suspension with bath particles a = 0:90 ± 0:05μm.
|
24 |
Integrated System Technologies for Modular Trapped Ion Quantum Information ProcessingCrain, Stephen Gregory January 2016 (has links)
<p>Although trapped ion technology is well-suited for quantum information science, scalability of the system remains one of the main challenges. One of the challenges associated with scaling the ion trap quantum computer is the ability to individually manipulate the increasing number of qubits. Using micro-mirrors fabricated with micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) technology, laser beams are focused on individual ions in a linear chain and steer the focal point in two dimensions. Multiple single qubit gates are demonstrated on trapped 171Yb+ qubits and the gate performance is characterized using quantum state tomography. The system features negligible crosstalk to neighboring ions (< 3e-4), and switching speeds comparable to typical single qubit gate times (< 2 us). In a separate experiment, photons scattered from the 171Yb+ ion are coupled into an optical fiber with 63% efficiency using a high numerical aperture lens (0.6 NA). The coupled photons are directed to superconducting nanowire single photon detectors (SNSPD), which provide a higher detector efficiency (69%) compared to traditional photomultiplier tubes (35%). The total system photon collection efficiency is increased from 2.2% to 3.4%, which allows for fast state detection of the qubit. For a detection beam intensity of 11 mW/cm2, the average detection time is 23.7 us with 99.885(7)% detection fidelity. The technologies demonstrated in this thesis can be integrated to form a single quantum register with all of the necessary resources to perform local gates as well as high fidelity readout and provide a photon link to other systems.</p> / Dissertation
|
25 |
Monte Carlo of Trapped Ultracold Neutrons in the UCNτ TrapCallahan, Nathan, Liu, Chen-Yu, Gonzalez, Fransisco, Adamek, Evan, Bowman, James D., Broussard, Leah J., Clayton, S. M., Currie, S., Cude-Woods, C., Dees, E. B., Ding, X., Egnel, E. M., Fellers, D., Fox, W., Geltenbort, Peter, Hickerson, Kevin P., Hoffbauer, M. A., Holley, A. T., Komives, A., MacDonald, S. W.T., Makela, Marc, Morris, C. L., Ortiz, J. D., Pattie, Robert W., Jr., Ramsey, J., Salvat, D. J., Saunders, A., Seestrom, Susan J., Sharapov, E. I., Sjue, Sky L., Tang, Z., Vanderwerp, J., Vogelaar, B., Walstrom, P. L., Wang, Z., Weaver, H., Wei, W., Wexler, J., Young, A. R., Zeck, B. A. 16 October 2018 (has links)
In the UCNτ experiment, ultracold neutrons (UCN) are confined by magnetic fields and the Earth’s gravitational field. Field-trapping mitigates the problem of UCN loss on material surfaces, which caused the largest correction in prior neutron experiments using material bottles. However, the neutron dynamics in field traps differ qualitatively from those in material bottles. In the latter case, neutrons bounce off material surfaces with significant diffusivity and the population quickly reaches a static spatial distribution with a density gradient induced by the gravitational potential. In contrast, the field-confined UCN—whose dynamics can be described by Hamiltonian mechanics—do not exhibit the stochastic behaviors typical of an ideal gas model as observed in material bottles. In this report, we will describe our efforts to simulate UCN trapping in the UCNτ magneto-gravitational trap. We compare the simulation output to the experimental results to determine the parameters of the neutron detector and the input neutron distribution. The tuned model is then used to understand the phase space evolution of neutrons observed in the UCNτ experiment. We will discuss the implications of chaotic dynamics on controlling the systematic effects, such as spectral cleaning and microphonic heating, for a successful UCN lifetime experiment to reach a 0.01% level of precision.
|
26 |
Study of Proteoforms, DNA and Complexes using Trapped Ion Mobility Spectrometry-Mass SpectrometryGarabedian, Alyssa Lynn 26 March 2018 (has links)
The characterization of biomolecules and biomolecular complexes represents an area of significant research activity because of the link between structure and function. Drug development relies on structural information in order to target certain domains. Many traditional biochemical techniques, however, are limited by their ability to characterize only certain stable forms of a molecule. As a result, multidimensional approaches, such as ion mobility mass spectrometry coupled to mass spectrometry (IMS-MS), are becoming very attractive tools as they provide fast separation, detection and identification of molecules, in addition to providing three-dimensional shape for structural elucidation. The present work expands the use and application of trapped ion mobility spectrometry-coupled to mass spectrometry (TIMS-MS) by analyzing a range of biomolecules (including proteoforms, intrinsically disordered peptides, DNA and molecular complexes). The aim is to i) evaluate the TIMS platform measuring sensitivity, selectivity, and separation of targeted compounds, ii) pioneer new applications of TIMS for a more efficient and higher throughput methodologies for identification and characterization of biomolecular ions, and iii) characterize the dynamics of selected biomolecules for insight into the folding pathways and the intra-or intermolecular interactions that define their conformational space.
|
27 |
Coastal Trapped Waves Generated By Hurricane Andrew on the Texas-Louisiana ShelfPearce, Stuart 2011 December 1900 (has links)
The Texas-Louisiana Shelf Circulation and Transport Study featured moorings that covered the shelf during 1992 to 1994, and captured the oceanic response on the shelf to category 4 Hurricane Andrew in August of 1992. Eighty-one current meters distributed over 31 moorings along several contours of isobaths provided excellent spatial and temporal coverage over the shelf. The low-frequency variability (2 days and longer) of current observations and tide gauges to the West of the storm are analyzed after the passage of Andrew, focusing on the region outside of direct hurricane forcing. Wavelet analyses are utilized to investigate the dominant periods excited by the storm over the shelf and their temporal evolution after forcing has subsided. Subsequent to the storm's passage, the observations and wavelet transforms show a two-to-four day period coastal trapped wave that propagate westward at speeds near 6 m/s and then around the Texas bend along the bathymetry. The signal remains detectable in observations as far south as Port Isabel, Texas. The prominent frequencies determined from wavelet analysis are compared with predicted coastal trapped wave dispersion modes and show good agreement in the predicted group speed and cross-shelf structure of the first mode. The energies calculated from the data indicate a largely barotropic shelf wave response which is corroborated in the observed currents and by theory.
|
28 |
Development and evaluation of the central trapping electrode trapped-ion cell for Fourier transform mass spectrometry /Ostrander, Chad Michael, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
|
29 |
Techniques for improved mass spectrometric analysis of biologically relevant molecules produced by MALDI and ESI in the quadrupole ion trap /Goolsby, Brian James, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
|
30 |
High-fidelity quantum logic in Ca+Ballance, Christopher J. January 2014 (has links)
Trapped atomic ions are one of the most promising systems for building a quantum computer -- all of the fundamental operations needed to build a quantum computer have been demonstrated in such systems. The challenge now is to understand and reduce the operation errors to below the 'fault-tolerant threshold' (the level below which quantum error correction works), and to scale up the current few-qubit experiments to many qubits. This thesis describes experimental work concentrated primarily on the first of these challenges. We demonstrate high-fidelity single-qubit and two-qubit (entangling) gates with errors at or below the fault-tolerant threshold. We also implement an entangling gate between two different species of ions, a tool which may be useful for certain scalable architectures. We study the speed/fidelity trade-off for a two-qubit phase gate implemented in <sup>43</sup>Ca<sup>+</sup> hyperfine trapped-ion qubits. We develop an error model which describes the fundamental and technical imperfections / limitations that contribute to the measured gate error. We characterize and minimise various error sources contributing to the measured fidelity, allowing us to account for errors due to the single-qubit operations and state readout (each at the 0.1% level), and to identify the leading sources of error in the two-qubit entangling operation. We achieve gate fidelities ranging between 97.1(2)% (for a gate time t<sub>g</sub> = 3.8 μs) and 99.9(1)% (for t<sub>g</sub> = 100 μs), representing respectively the fastest and lowest-error two-qubit gates reported between trapped-ion qubits by nearly an order of magnitude in each case. We also characterise single-qubit gates with average errors below 10<sup>-4</sup> per operation, over an order of magnitude better than previously achieved with laser-driven operations. Additionally, we present work on a mixed-species entangling gate. We entangle of a single <sup>40</sup>Ca<sup>+</sup> ion and a single <sup>43</sup>Ca<sup>+</sup> ion with a fidelity of 99.8(5)%, and perform full tomography of the resulting entangled state. We describe how this mixed-species gate mechanism could be used to entangle <sup>43</sup>Ca<sup>+</sup> and <sup>88</sup>Sr<sup>+</sup>, a promising combination of ions for future experiments.
|
Page generated in 0.0484 seconds