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Dive into the research topics where Eric M. Kessler is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric M. Kessler.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Quantum error correction for metrology.

Eric M. Kessler; Igor Lovchinsky; Alexander Sushkov; Mikhail D. Lukin

We propose and analyze a new approach based on quantum error correction (QEC) to improve quantum metrology in the presence of noise. We identify the conditions under which QEC allows one to improve the signal-to-noise ratio in quantum-limited measurements, and we demonstrate that it enables, in certain situations, Heisenberg-limited sensitivity. We discuss specific applications to nanoscale sensing using nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond in which QEC can significantly improve the measurement sensitivity and bandwidth under realistic experimental conditions.


Physical Review X | 2015

Universal Quantum Transducers Based on Surface Acoustic Waves

M. J. A. Schuetz; Eric M. Kessler; Geza Giedke; L. M. K. Vandersypen; Mikhail D. Lukin; J. I. Cirac

We propose a universal, on-chip quantum transducer based on surface acoustic waves in piezoactive materials. Because of the intrinsic piezoelectric (and/or magnetostrictive) properties of the material, our approach provides a universal platform capable of coherently linking a broad array of qubits, including quantum dots, trapped ions, nitrogen-vacancy centers, or superconducting qubits. The quantized modes of surface acoustic waves lie in the gigahertz range and can be strongly confined close to the surface in phononic cavities and guided in acoustic waveguides. We show that this type of surface acoustic excitation can be utilized efficiently as a quantum bus, serving as an on-chip, mechanical cavity-QED equivalent of microwave photons and enabling long-range coupling of a wide range of qubits.


Physical Review A | 2012

Dissipative phase transition in a central spin system

Eric M. Kessler; Geza Giedke; A. Imamoglu; Susanne F. Yelin; Mikhail D. Lukin; J. I. Cirac

We investigate dissipative phase transitions in an open central spin system. In our model the central spin interacts coherently with the surrounding many-particle spin environment and is subject to coherent driving and dissipation. We develop analytical tools based on a self-consistent Holstein-Primakoff approximation that enable us to determine the complete phase diagram associated with the steady states of this system. It includes first and second-order phase transitions, as well as regions of bistability, spin squeezing and altered spin pumping dynamics. Prospects of observing these phenomena in systems such as electron spins in quantum dots or NV centers coupled to lattice nuclear spins are briefly discussed.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Heisenberg-Limited Atom Clocks Based on Entangled Qubits

Eric M. Kessler; Peter Komar; Michael Bishof; Liang Jiang; Anders S. Sørensen; J. Ye; Mikhail D. Lukin

We present a quantum-enhanced atomic clock protocol based on groups of sequentially larger Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) states that achieves the best clock stability allowed by quantum theory up to a logarithmic correction. Importantly the protocol is designed to work under realistic conditions where the drift of the phase of the laser interrogating the atoms is the main source of decoherence. The simultaneous interrogation of the laser phase with a cascade of GHZ states realizes an incoherent version of the phase estimation algorithm that enables Heisenberg-limited operation while extending the coherent interrogation time beyond the laser noise limit. We compare and merge the new protocol with existing state of the art interrogation schemes, and identify the precise conditions under which entanglement provides an advantage for clock stabilization: it allows a significant gain in the stability for short averaging time.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Nuclear Spin Cooling Using Overhauser-Field Selective Coherent Population Trapping

Mena Issler; Eric M. Kessler; Geza Giedke; Susanne F. Yelin; Ignacio Cirac; Mikhail D. Lukin; Atac Imamoglu

We show that a quantum interference effect in optical absorption from two electronic spin states of a solid-state emitter can be used to prepare the surrounding environment of nuclear spins in well-defined states, thereby suppressing electronic spin dephasing. The coupled electron-nuclei system evolves into a coherent population trapping state by optical-excitation-induced nuclear-spin diffusion for a broad range of initial optical detunings. The spectroscopic signature of this evolution where the single-electron strongly modifies its environment is a drastic broadening of the dark resonance in optical absorption experiments. The large difference in electronic and nuclear time scales allows us to verify the preparation of nuclear spins in the desired state.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Heralded quantum gates with integrated error detection in optical cavities.

Johannes Borregaard; Peter Komar; Eric M. Kessler; Anders S. Sørensen; Mikhail D. Lukin

We propose and analyze heralded quantum gates between qubits in optical cavities. They employ an auxiliary qubit to report if a successful gate occurred. In this manner, the errors, which would have corrupted a deterministic gate, are converted into a nonunity probability of success: once successful, the gate has a much higher fidelity than a similar deterministic gate. Specifically, we describe that a heralded, near-deterministic controlled phase gate (CZ gate) with the conditional error arbitrarily close to zero and the success probability that approaches unity as the cooperativity of the system, C, becomes large. Furthermore, we describe an extension to near-deterministic N-qubit Toffoli gate with a favorable error scaling. These gates can be directly employed in quantum repeater networks to facilitate near-ideal entanglement swapping, thus greatly speeding up the entanglement distribution.


Physical Review A | 2012

Generalized Schrieffer-Wolff formalism for dissipative systems

Eric M. Kessler

We present a formalized perturbation theory for Markovian open systems in the language of a generalized Schrieffer-Wolff (SW) transformation. A non-unitary rotation decouples the unper- turbed steady states from all fast degrees of freedom, in order to obtain an effective Liouvillian, that reproduces the exact low excitation spectrum of the system. The transformation is derived in a constructive way, yielding a perturbative expansion of the effective Liouville operator. The presented formalism realizes an adiabatic elimination of fast degrees of freedom to arbitrary orders in the perturbation. We exemplarily employ the SW formalism to two generic open systems and discuss general properties of the different orders of the perturbation.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Quantum Network of Atom Clocks: A Possible Implementation with Neutral Atoms

Peter Komar; T. Topcu; Eric M. Kessler; A. Derevianko; Vladan Vuletic; J. Ye; M. D. Lukin

P. Kómár, T. Topcu, 2, 3 E. M. Kessler, 3 A. Derevianko, 2, 3 V. Vuletić, J. Ye, and M. D. Lukin Physics Department, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA Department of Physics, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557, USA ITAMP, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA Department of Physics and Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA JILA, NIST, Department of Physics, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA (Dated: March 22, 2016)We propose a protocol for creating a fully entangled Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger-type state of neutral atoms in spatially separated optical atomic clocks. In our scheme, local operations make use of the strong dipole-dipole interaction between Rydberg excitations, which give rise to fast and reliable quantum operations involving all atoms in the ensemble. The necessary entanglement between distant ensembles is mediated by single-photon quantum channels and collectively enhanced light-matter couplings. These techniques can be used to create the recently proposed quantum clock network based on neutral atom optical clocks. We specifically analyze a possible realization of this scheme using neutral Yb ensembles.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Optical Superradiance from Nuclear Spin Environment of Single- Photon Emitters

Eric M. Kessler; Susanne F. Yelin; Mikhail D. Lukin; J. Ignacio Cirac; Geza Giedke

We show that superradiant optical emission can be observed from the polarized nuclear spin ensemble surrounding a single-photon emitter such as a single quantum dot or nitrogen-vacancy center. The superradiant light is emitted under optical pumping conditions and would be observable with realistic experimental parameters.


Physical Review A | 2015

Long-distance entanglement distribution using individual atoms in optical cavities

Johannes Borregaard; Peter Komar; Eric M. Kessler; Mikhail D. Lukin; Anders S. Sørensen

Individual atoms in optical cavities can provide an efficient interface between stationary qubits and flying qubits (photons), which is an essentiel building block for quantum communication. Furthermore, cavity assisted controlled-not (CNOT) gates can be used for swapping entanglement to long distances in a quantum repeater setup. Nonetheless, dissipation introduced by the cavity during the CNOT may increase the experimental difficulty in obtaining long-distance entanglement distribution using these systems. We analyse and compare a number of cavity-based repeater schemes combining various entanglement generation schemes and cavity assisted CNOT gates. We find that a scheme, where high-fidelity entanglement is first generated in a two-photon detection scheme and then swapped to long distances using a recently proposed heralded CZ-gate exhibits superior performance compared to the other schemes. The heralded gate moves the effect of dissipation from the fidelity to the success probability of the gate thereby enabling high-fidelity entanglement swapping. As a result, high-rate entanglement distribution can be achieved over long distances even for low cooperativities of the atom-cavity systems. This high-fidelity repeater is shown to outperform the other cavity-based schemes by up to two orders of magnitude in the rate for realistic parameters and large distances (1000 km).

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L. M. K. Vandersypen

Delft University of Technology

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J. Ye

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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