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Dive into the research topics where E. Il'ichev is active.

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Featured researches published by E. Il'ichev.


Physical Review Letters | 2001

Degenerate Ground State in a Mesoscopic YBa2Cu3O7x Grain Boundary Josephson Junction

M. Grajcar; R. Hlubina; H. E. Hoenig; R. P. J. Ijsselsteijn; E. Il'ichev

We have measured the current-phase relationship I(varphi) of symmetric 45 degrees YBa2Cu3O7-x grain boundary Josephson junctions. Substantial deviations of the Josephson current from conventional tunnel-junction behavior have been observed: (i) The critical current exhibits, as a function of temperature T, a local minimum at a temperature T*. (ii) At T approximately T*, the first harmonic of I(phi) changes sign. (iii) For T<T*, the second harmonic of I(phi) is comparable to the first harmonic, and (iv) the ground state of the junction becomes degenerate. The results are in good agreement with a microscopic model of Josephson junctions between d-wave superconductors.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Controllable coupling of superconducting flux qubits.

van der Ploeg Sh; A. Izmalkov; van den Brink Am; U. Hubner; M. Grajcar; E. Il'ichev; H.-G. Meyer; Alexandre M. Zagoskin

We have realized controllable coupling between two three-junction flux qubits by inserting an additional coupler loop between them, containing three Josephson junctions. Two of these are shared with the qubit loops, providing strong qubit-coupler interaction. The third junction gives the coupler a nontrivial current-flux relation; its derivative (i.e., the susceptibility) determines the coupling strength J, which thus is tunable in situ via the couplers flux bias. In the qubit regime, J was varied from approximately 45 (antiferromagnetic) to approximately -55 mK (ferromagnetic); in particular, J vanishes for an intermediate coupler bias. Measurements on a second sample illuminate the relation between two-qubit tunable coupling and three-qubit behavior.


Physical Review B | 2010

Weak continuous monitoring of a flux qubit using coplanar waveguide resonator

G. Oelsner; S. H. W. van der Ploeg; P. Macha; Uwe Hübner; D. Born; S. Anders; E. Il'ichev; H.-G. Meyer; M. Grajcar; S. Wünsch; M. Siegel; A. N. Omelyanchouk; O. Astafiev

We study a flux qubit in a coplanar waveguide resonator by measuring transmission through the system. In our system with the flux qubit decoupled galvanically from the resonator, the intermediate coupling regime is achieved. In this regime, dispersive readout is possible with weak back action on the qubit. The detailed theoretical analysis and simulations give good agreement with the experimental data and allow us to make the qubit characterization.


Physical Review B | 2005

Direct Josephson coupling between superconducting flux qubits

M. Grajcar; A. Izmalkov; S. H. W. van der Ploeg; S. Linzen; E. Il'ichev; Th. Wagner; U. Huebner

We have demonstrated strong antiferromagnetic coupling between two three-junction flux qubits based on a shared Josephson junction, and therefore not limited by the small inductances of the qubit loops. The coupling sign and magnitude were measured by coupling the system to a high-quality superconducting tank circuit. Design modifications allowing to continuously tune the coupling strength and/or make the coupling ferromagnetic are discussed.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2007

Adiabatic Quantum Computation With Flux Qubits, First Experimental Results

S. H. W. van der Ploeg; A. Izmalkov; M. Grajcar; U. Hubner; S. Linzen; S. Uchaikin; Th. Wagner; A. Yu. Smirnov; A.M. van den Brink; M. H. S. Amin; Alexandre M. Zagoskin; E. Il'ichev; H.-G. Meyer

Controllable adiabatic evolution of a multi-qubit system can be used for adiabatic quantum computation (AQC). This evolution ends at a configuration where the Hamiltonian of the system encodes the solution of the problem to be solved. As a first steps towards realization of AQC we have investigated two, three and four flux qubit systems. These systems were characterized by making use of a radio-frequency method. We designed two-qubit systems with coupling energies up to several kelvins. For the three-flux-qubit systems we determined the complete ground-state flux diagram in the three dimensional flux space around the qubits common degeneracy point. We show that the systems Hamiltonian can be completely reconstructed from our measurements. Our concept for the implementation of AQC, by making use of flux qubits, is discussed.


Physical Review B | 2010

Multiphoton excitations and inverse population in a system of two flux qubits

E. Il'ichev; S. N. Shevchenko; S. H. W. van der Ploeg; M. Grajcar; E. A. Temchenko; A. N. Omelyanchouk; H.-G. Meyer

We study the multiphoton spectroscopy of artificial solid-s tate four-level quantum system. This system is formed by two coupled superconducting flux qubits. When mult iple driving frequency of the applied microwaves matches the energy difference between any two levels, the transition to the upper level is induced. We demonstrate two types of the multi-photon transitions: direct transitions between two levels and ladder-type transitions via an intermediate level. Our calculations sh ow, that for the latter transitions, in particular, the inverse population of the excited state with respect to the gro und one is realized. These processes can be useful for the control of the level population for the multilevel sc alable quantum systems.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Spatially resolved single photon detection with a quantum sensor array

Alexandre M. Zagoskin; Richard D. Wilson; Mark J. Everitt; Sergey Savel'ev; Dmitry R. Gulevich; Justin M. Allen; V.K. Dubrovich; E. Il'ichev

We propose a method of resolving a spatially coherent signal, which contains on average just a single photon, against the background of local noise at the same frequency. The method is based on detecting the signal simultaneously in several points more than a wavelength apart through the entangling interaction of the incoming photon with the quantum metamaterial sensor array. The interaction produces the spatially correlated quantum state of the sensor array, characterised by a collective observable (e.g., total magnetic moment), which is read out using a quantum nondemolition measurement. We show that the effects of local noise (e.g., fluctuations affecting the elements of the array) are suppressed relative to the signal from the spatially coherent field of the incoming photon as , where N is the number of array elements. The realisation of this approach in the microwave range would be especially useful and is within the reach of current experimental techniques.Abstract We propose a method of detecting the wave front of a single photon in several points more than a photon wavelength apart. It is based on the entangling interaction of the incoming photon with the quantum metamaterial sensor array, which produces the spatially correlated quantum state of the latter, and the quantum nondemolition readout of a collective observable (e.g., total magnetic moment), which characterizes this quantum state. We show that the effects of local noise (e.g., fluctuations affecting the elements of the array) are suppressed relative to the signal from the spatially coherent field of the incoming photon. The realization of this approach in the microwave range would be especially useful and is within the reach of current experimental techniques.


Archive | 2005

Adiabatic quantum computation with superconducting qubits

Mohammad H. S. Amin; Miroslav Grajcar; A. Izmalkov; E. Il'ichev; Miles F. H. Steininger


Archive | 2002

Characterization and measurement of superconducting structures

E. Il'ichev; Miroslav Grajcar; Alexandre M. Zagoskin; Miles F. H. Steininger


Quantum Information Processing | 2007

A Characterization of Global Entanglement

Peter Love; Alec Maassen van den Brink; A. Yu. Smirnov; Mohammad H. S. Amin; M. Grajcar; E. Il'ichev; A. Izmalkov; Alexandre M. Zagoskin

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H.-G. Meyer

Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology

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M. Grajcar

Comenius University in Bratislava

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Th. Wagner

University of Duisburg-Essen

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M. Grajcar

Comenius University in Bratislava

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Uwe Hübner

Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology

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