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Dive into the research topics where B. P. Lanyon is active.

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Featured researches published by B. P. Lanyon.


Science | 2011

Universal digital quantum simulation with trapped ions.

B. P. Lanyon; C. Hempel; Daniel Nigg; Markus Müller; R. Gerritsma; F. Zähringer; Philipp Schindler; Julio T. Barreiro; M. Rambach; Gerhard Kirchmair; Markus Hennrich; P. Zoller; R. Blatt; Christian F. Roos

A series of trapped calcium ions was used to simulate the complex dynamics of an interacting spin system. A digital quantum simulator is an envisioned quantum device that can be programmed to efficiently simulate any other local system. We demonstrate and investigate the digital approach to quantum simulation in a system of trapped ions. With sequences of up to 100 gates and 6 qubits, the full time dynamics of a range of spin systems are digitally simulated. Interactions beyond those naturally present in our simulator are accurately reproduced, and quantitative bounds are provided for the overall simulation quality. Our results demonstrate the key principles of digital quantum simulation and provide evidence that the level of control required for a full-scale device is within reach.


Nature | 2014

Quasiparticle engineering and entanglement propagation in a quantum many-body system

Petar Jurcevic; B. P. Lanyon; Philipp Hauke; C. Hempel; P. Zoller; R. Blatt; Christian F. Roos

The key to explaining and controlling a range of quantum phenomena is to study how information propagates around many-body systems. Quantum dynamics can be described by particle-like carriers of information that emerge in the collective behaviour of the underlying system, the so-called quasiparticles. These elementary excitations are predicted to distribute quantum information in a fashion determined by the system’s interactions. Here we report quasiparticle dynamics observed in a quantum many-body system of trapped atomic ions. First, we observe the entanglement distributed by quasiparticles as they trace out light-cone-like wavefronts. Second, using the ability to tune the interaction range in our system, we observe information propagation in an experimental regime where the effective-light-cone picture does not apply. Our results will enable experimental studies of a range of quantum phenomena, including transport, thermalization, localization and entanglement growth, and represent a first step towards a new quantum-optic regime of engineered quasiparticles with tunable nonlinear interactions.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Quantum simulation of the Klein paradox with trapped ions

R. Gerritsma; B. P. Lanyon; Gerhard Kirchmair; F. Zähringer; C. Hempel; J. Casanova; Juan José García-Ripoll; E. Solano; R. Blatt; Christian F. Roos

We report on quantum simulations of relativistic scattering dynamics using trapped ions. The simulated state of a scattering particle is encoded in both the electronic and vibrational state of an ion, representing the discrete and continuous components of relativistic wave functions. Multiple laser fields and an auxiliary ion simulate the dynamics generated by the Dirac equation in the presence of a scattering potential. Measurement and reconstruction of the particle wave packet enables a frame-by-frame visualization of the scattering processes. By precisely engineering a range of external potentials we are able to simulate text book relativistic scattering experiments and study Klein tunneling in an analogue quantum simulator. We describe extensions to solve problems that are beyond current classical computing capabilities.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Direct observation of dynamical quantum phase transitions in an interacting many-body system

Petar Jurcevic; H. Shen; Philipp Hauke; Christine Maier; T. Brydges; C. Hempel; B. P. Lanyon; Markus Heyl; R. Blatt; C. F. Roos

The theory of phase transitions represents a central concept for the characterization of equilibrium matter. In this work we study experimentally an extension of this theory to the nonequilibrium dynamical regime termed dynamical quantum phase transitions (DQPTs). We investigate and measure DQPTs in a string of ions simulating interacting transverse-field Ising models. During the nonequilibrium dynamics induced by a quantum quench we show for strings of up to 10 ions the direct detection of DQPTs by revealing nonanalytic behavior in time. Moreover, we provide a link between DQPTs and the dynamics of other quantities such as the magnetization, and we establish a connection between DQPTs and entanglement production.


Physical Review X | 2013

Entanglement growth in quench dynamics with variable range interactions

Johannes Schachenmayer; B. P. Lanyon; Christian F. Roos; Andrew J. Daley

Studying entanglement growth in quantum dynamics provides both insight into the underlying microscopic processes and information about the complexity of the quantum states, which is related to the efficiency of simulations on classical computers. Recently, experiments with trapped ions, polar molecules, and Rydberg excitations have provided new opportunities to observe dynamics with long-range interactions. We explore nonequilibrium coherent dynamics after a quantum quench in such systems, identifying qualitatively different behavior as the exponent of algebraically decaying spin-spin interactions in a transverse Ising chain is varied. Computing the build-up of bipartite entanglement as well as mutual information between distant spins, we identify linear growth of entanglement entropy corresponding to propagation of quasiparticles for shorter range interactions, with the maximum rate of growth occurring when the Hamiltonian parameters match those for the quantum phase transition. Counter-intuitively, the growth of bipartite entanglement for long-range interactions is only logarithmic for most regimes, i.e., substantially slower than for shorter range interactions. Experiments with trapped ions allow for the realization of this system with a tunable interaction range, and we show that the different phenomena are robust for finite system sizes and in the presence of noise. These results can act as a direct guide for the generation of large-scale entanglement in such experiments, towards a regime where the entanglement growth can render existing classical simulations inefficient.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Measurement-based quantum computation with trapped ions.

B. P. Lanyon; Petar Jurcevic; M. Zwerger; C. Hempel; Esteban A. Martinez; W. Dür; Hans J. Briegel; R. Blatt; C. F. Roos

Measurement-based quantum computation represents a powerful and flexible framework for quantum information processing, based on the notion of entangled quantum states as computational resources. The most prominent application is the one-way quantum computer, with the cluster state as its universal resource. Here we demonstrate the principles of measurement-based quantum computation using deterministically generated cluster states, in a system of trapped calcium ions. First we implement a universal set of operations for quantum computing. Second we demonstrate a family of measurement-based quantum error correction codes and show their improved performance as the code length is increased. The methods presented can be directly scaled up to generate graph states of several tens of qubits.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Experimental generation of quantum discord via noisy processes.

B. P. Lanyon; Petar Jurcevic; C. Hempel; Manuel Gessner; Vedral; R. Blatt; C. F. Roos

B. P. Lanyon,1, 2 P. Jurcevic,1, 2 C. Hempel,1, 2 M. Gessner,3, 4 V. Vedral,5, 6, 7 R. Blatt,1, 2 and C. F. Roos1, 2 1Institut für Quantenoptik und Quanteninformation, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Technikerstr. 21A, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria 2 Institut für Experimentalphysik, Universität Innsbruck, Technikerstr. 25, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria 3 Department of Physics, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA 4 Physikalisches Institut, Universität Freiburg, Hermann-Herder-Strasse 3, D-79104 Freiburg, Germany 5 Centre for Quantum Technologies, National University of Singapore, 3 Science Drive 2, 117543, Singapore 6 Clarendon Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PU, U.K. 7Department of Physics, National University of Singapore, 2 Science Drive 3, 117542, Singapore (Dated: May 9, 2019)


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Experimental violation of multipartite Bell inequalities with trapped ions.

B. P. Lanyon; M. Zwerger; Petar Jurcevic; C. Hempel; W. Dür; Hans J. Briegel; R. Blatt; C. F. Roos

We report on the experimental violation of multipartite Bell inequalities by entangled states of trapped ions. First, we consider resource states for measurement-based quantum computation of between 3 and 7 ions and show that all strongly violate a Bell-type inequality for graph states, where the criterion for violation is a sufficiently high fidelity. Second, we analyze Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger states of up to 14 ions generated in a previous experiment using stronger Mermin-Klyshko inequalities, and show that in this case the violation of local realism increases exponentially with system size. These experiments represent a violation of multipartite Bell-type inequalities of deterministically prepared entangled states. In addition, the detection loophole is closed.


Nature Photonics | 2013

Entanglement-enhanced detection of single-photon scattering events

C. Hempel; B. P. Lanyon; Petar Jurcevic; R. Gerritsma; R. Blatt; C. F. Roos

A highly efficient method is demonstrated for detecting individual photons scattering from short-lived transitions in single trapped ions. An entangled state is used to amplify the tiny momentum kick an ion receives on scattering a photon. Cat-state spectroscopy has an 18-fold higher measurement sensitivity than the direct detection method.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Spectroscopy of Interacting Quasiparticles in Trapped Ions.

Petar Jurcevic; Philipp Hauke; Christine Maier; C. Hempel; B. P. Lanyon; R. Blatt; C. F. Roos

The static and dynamic properties of many-body quantum systems are often well described by collective excitations, known as quasiparticles. Engineered quantum systems offer the opportunity to study such emergent phenomena in a precisely controlled and otherwise inaccessible way. We present a spectroscopic technique to study artificial quantum matter and use it for characterizing quasiparticles in a many-body system of trapped atomic ions. Our approach is to excite combinations of the systems fundamental quasiparticle eigenmodes, given by delocalized spin waves. By observing the dynamical response to superpositions of such eigenmodes, we extract the system dispersion relation, magnetic order, and even detect signatures of quasiparticle interactions. Our technique is not limited to trapped ions, and it is suitable for verifying quantum simulators by tuning them into regimes where the collective excitations have a simple form.

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R. Blatt

University of Innsbruck

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C. Hempel

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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C. F. Roos

University of Innsbruck

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P. Zoller

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Philipp Hauke

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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R. Gerritsma

University of Amsterdam

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