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Dive into the research topics where C. S. Pai is active.

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Featured researches published by C. S. Pai.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Demonstration of integrated microscale optics in surface-electrode ion traps

J. True Merrill; Curtis Volin; David W. Landgren; Jason M. Amini; Kenneth Wright; S. Charles Doret; C. S. Pai; Harley Hayden; Tyler N. Killian; Daniel L. Faircloth; Kenneth R. Brown; Alexa W. Harter; Richart E. Slusher

In ion trap quantum information processing, efficient fluorescence collection is critical for fast, high-fidelity qubit detection and ion–photon entanglement. The expected size of future many-ion processors requires scalable light collection systems. We report on the development and testing of a microfabricated surface-electrode ion trap with an integrated high-numerical aperture (NA) micromirror for fluorescence collection. When coupled to a low-NA lens, the optical system is inherently scalable to large arrays of mirrors in a single device. We demonstrate the stable trapping and transport of 40Ca+ ions over a 0.63 NA micromirror and observe a factor of 1.9 enhancement of photon collection compared to the planar region of the trap.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Reliable transport through a microfabricated X-junction surface-electrode ion trap

Kenneth Wright; Jason M. Amini; Daniel L. Faircloth; Curtis Volin; S. Charles Doret; Harley Hayden; C. S. Pai; David W. Landgren; Douglas R. Denison; Tyler N. Killian; Richart E. Slusher; Alexa W. Harter

We report the design, fabrication and characterization of a micro- fabricated surface-electrode ion trap that supports controlled transport through the two-dimensional intersection of linear trapping zones arranged in a 90 cross. The trap is fabricated with very large scalable integration techniques which are compatible with scaling to a large quantum information processor. The shape of the radio-frequency electrodes is optimized with a genetic algorithm to reduce axial pseudopotential barriers and minimize ion heating during transport. Seventy-eight independent dc control electrodes enable fine control of the trapping potentials. We demonstrate reliable ion transport between junction legs and determine the rate of ion loss due to transport. Doppler-cooled ions survive more than 10 5 round-trip transits between junction legs without loss and more than 65 consecutive round trips without laser cooling.


New Journal of Physics | 2012

Controlling trapping potentials and stray electric fields in a microfabricated ion trap through design and compensation

S. Charles Doret; Jason M. Amini; Kenneth Wright; Curtis Volin; Tyler N. Killian; Arkadas Ozakin; Douglas R. Denison; Harley Hayden; C. S. Pai; Richart E. Slusher; Alexa W. Harter

Recent advances in quantum information processing with trapped ions have demonstrated the need for new ion trap architectures capable of holding and manipulating chains of many (>10) ions. Here we present the design and detailed characterization of a new linear trap, microfabricated with scalable complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) techniques, that is well-suited to this challenge. Forty-four individually controlled dc electrodes provide the many degrees of freedom required to construct anharmonic potential wells, shuttle ions, merge and split ion chains, precisely tune secular mode frequencies, and adjust the orientation of trap axes. Microfabricated capacitors on dc electrodes suppress radio-frequency pickup and excess micromotion, while a top-level ground layer simplifies modeling of electric fields and protects trap structures underneath. A localized aperture in the substrate provides access to the trapping region from an oven below, permitting deterministic loading of particular isotopic/elemental sequences via species-selective photoionization. The shapes of the aperture and radio-frequency electrodes are optimized to minimize perturbation of the trapping pseudopotential. Laboratory experiments verify simulated potentials and characterize trapping lifetimes, stray electric fields, and ion heating rates, while measurement and cancellation of spatially-varying stray electric fields permits the formation of nearly-equally spaced ion chains.


Optics Letters | 2010

Multiscale optics for enhanced light collection from a point source

Rachel Noek; Caleb Knoernschild; Justin Migacz; Taehyun Kim; Peter Maunz; True Merrill; Harley Hayden; C. S. Pai; Jungsang Kim

High-efficiency collection of photons emitted by a point source over a wide field of view (FoV) is crucial for many applications. Multiscale optics offer improved light collection by utilizing small optical components placed close to the optical source, while maintaining a wide FoV provided by conventional imaging optics. In this work, we demonstrate collection efficiency of 26% of photons emitted by a pointlike source using a micromirror fabricated in silicon with no significant decrease in collection efficiency over a 10 mm object space.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Spatially uniform single-qubit gate operations with near-field microwaves and composite pulse compensation

C M Shappert; J T Merrill; Kenneth R. Brown; Jason M. Amini; Curtis Volin; S C Doret; Harley Hayden; C. S. Pai; Alexa W. Harter

We present a microfabricated surface-electrode ion trap with a pair of integrated waveguides that generate a standing microwave field resonant with the 171 Yb + hyperfine qubit. The waveguides are engineered to position the wave antinode near the center of the trap, resulting in maximum field amplitude and uniformity along the trap axis. By calibrating the relative amplitudes and phases of the waveguide currents, we can control the polarization of the microwave field to reduce off-resonant coupling to undesired Zeeman sublevels. We demonstrate single-qubit -rotations as fast as 1µs with less than 6% variation in Rabi frequency over an 800µm microwave interaction region. Fully compensating pulse sequences further improve the uniformity of X-gates across this interaction region.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2011

Monolithic Microfabricated Symmetric Ion Trap for Quantum Information Processing

Fayaz Shaikh; Arkadas Ozakin; Jason M. Amini; Harley Hayden; C. S. Pai; Curtis Volin; Douglas R. Denison; Daniel L. Faircloth; Alexa W. Harter; Richart E. Slusher


Frontiers in Optics | 2017

Scalable Ion-Photon Quantum Interface based on Integrated Diffractive Mirrors

Steven Connell; Moji Ghadimi; Valdis Blums; Benjamin Geoffrey Norton; Paul Fisher; Jason M. Amini; Curtis Volin; Harley Hayden; C. S. Pai; David Kielpinski; Mirko Lobino; Erik Streed


Archive | 2014

In-Vacuum Electronics for Microfabricated Ion Traps

Nicholas D. Guise; Spencer D. Fallek; Harley Hayden; C. S. Pai; Curtis Volin; Kenton R. Brown; J. True Merrill; Jason M. Amini; Lisa M. Lust; Kelly P. Muldoon; Doug Carlson; Jerry Budach


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Robust quantum control of

J. True Merrill; Christopher M. Shappert; Kenton R. Brown; Curtis Volin; Harley Hayden; C. S. Pai; Alexa W. Harter


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

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S. Charles Doret; Jason M. Amini; Kenton R. Brown; Chris Shappert; David W. Landgren; Arkadas Ozakin; Harley Hayden; C. S. Pai; Curtis Volin; Lisa M. Lust; Alexa W. Harter

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Harley Hayden

Georgia Tech Research Institute

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Curtis Volin

Georgia Tech Research Institute

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Jason M. Amini

Georgia Tech Research Institute

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Alexa W. Harter

Georgia Tech Research Institute

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Arkadas Ozakin

Georgia Tech Research Institute

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Daniel L. Faircloth

Georgia Tech Research Institute

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David W. Landgren

Georgia Tech Research Institute

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Douglas R. Denison

Georgia Tech Research Institute

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Richart E. Slusher

Georgia Tech Research Institute

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