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Dive into the research topics where Filip K. Malinowski is active.

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Featured researches published by Filip K. Malinowski.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Noise Suppression Using Symmetric Exchange Gates in Spin Qubits

Frederico Rodrigues Martins; Filip K. Malinowski; Peter Nissen; Edwin Barnes; Saeed Fallahi; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra; C. M. Marcus; Ferdinand Kuemmeth

We demonstrate a substantial improvement in the spin-exchange gate using symmetric control instead of conventional detuning in GaAs spin qubits, up to a factor of six increase in the quality factor of the gate. For symmetric operation, nanosecond voltage pulses are applied to the barrier that controls the interdot potential between quantum dots, modulating the exchange interaction while maintaining symmetry between the dots. Excellent agreement is found with a model that separately includes electrical and nuclear noise sources for both detuning and symmetric gating schemes. Unlike exchange control via detuning, the decoherence of symmetric exchange rotations is dominated by rotation-axis fluctuations due to nuclear field noise rather than direct exchange noise.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2016

Notch filtering the nuclear environment of a spin qubit

Filip K. Malinowski; Frederico Rodrigues Martins; Peter Nissen; Edwin Barnes; Łukasz Cywiński; Mark S. Rudner; Saeed Fallahi; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra; C. M. Marcus; Ferdinand Kuemmeth

Electron spins in gate-defined quantum dots provide a promising platform for quantum computation. In particular, spin-based quantum computing in gallium arsenide takes advantage of the high quality of semiconducting materials, reliability in fabricating arrays of quantum dots and accurate qubit operations. However, the effective magnetic noise arising from the hyperfine interaction with uncontrolled nuclear spins in the host lattice constitutes a major source of decoherence. Low-frequency nuclear noise, responsible for fast (10 ns) inhomogeneous dephasing, can be removed by echo techniques. High-frequency nuclear noise, recently studied via echo revivals, occurs in narrow-frequency bands related to differences in Larmor precession of the three isotopes 69Ga, 71Ga and 75As (refs 15,16,17). Here, we show that both low- and high-frequency nuclear noise can be filtered by appropriate dynamical decoupling sequences, resulting in a substantial enhancement of spin qubit coherence times. Using nuclear notch filtering, we demonstrate a spin coherence time (T2) of 0.87 ms, five orders of magnitude longer than typical exchange gate times, and exceeding the longest coherence times reported to date in Si/SiGe gate-defined quantum dots.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Negative Spin Exchange in a Multielectron Quantum Dot

Frederico Rodrigues Martins; Filip K. Malinowski; Peter Nissen; Saeed Fallahi; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra; C. M. Marcus; Ferdinand Kuemmeth

We use a one-electron quantum dot as a spectroscopic probe to study the spin properties of a gate-controlled multielectron GaAs quantum dot at the transition between odd and even occupation numbers. We observe that the multielectron ground-state transitions from spin-1/2-like to singletlike to tripletlike as we increase the detuning towards the next higher charge state. The sign reversal in the inferred exchange energy persists at zero magnetic field, and the exchange strength is tunable by gate voltages and in-plane magnetic fields. Complementing spin leakage spectroscopy data, the inspection of coherent multielectron spin exchange oscillations provides further evidence for the sign reversal and, inferentially, for the importance of nontrivial multielectron spin exchange correlations.


Physical Review B | 2017

Symmetric operation of the resonant exchange qubit

Filip K. Malinowski; Frederico Rodrigues Martins; Peter Nissen; Saeed Fallahi; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra; C. M. Marcus; Ferdinand Kuemmeth

We operate a resonant exchange qubit in a highly symmetric triple-dot configuration using IQ-modulated RF pulses. At the resulting three-dimensional sweet spot the qubit splitting is an order of magnitude less sensitive to all relevant control voltages, compared to the conventional operating point, but we observe no significant improvement in the quality of Rabi oscillations. For weak driving this is consistent with Overhauser field fluctuations modulating the qubit splitting. For strong driving we infer that effective voltage noise modulates the coupling strength between RF drive and the qubit, thereby quickening Rabi decay. Application of CPMG dynamical decoupling sequences consisting of up to n = 32 {\pi} pulses significantly prolongs qubit coherence, leading to marginally longer dephasing times in the symmetric configuration. This is consistent with dynamical decoupling from low frequency noise, but quantitatively cannot be explained by effective gate voltage noise and Overhauser field fluctuations alone. Our results inform recent strategies for the utilization of partial sweet spots in the operation and long-distance coupling of triple-dot qubits.


Physical Review B | 2016

Filter function formalism beyond pure dephasing and non-Markovian noise in singlet-triplet qubits

Edwin Barnes; Mark S. Rudner; Frederico Rodrigues Martins; Filip K. Malinowski; C. M. Marcus; Ferdinand Kuemmeth

The filter function formalism quantitatively describes the dephasing of a qubit by a bath that causes Gaussian fluctuations in the qubit energies with an arbitrary noise power spectrum. Here, we extend this formalism to account for more general types of noise that couple to the qubit through terms that do not commute with the qubits bare Hamiltonian. Our approach applies to any power spectrum that generates slow noise fluctuations in the qubits evolution. We demonstrate our formalism in the case of singlet-triplet qubits subject to both quasistatic nuclear noise and


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Spectrum of the Nuclear Environment for GaAs Spin Qubits

Filip K. Malinowski; Frederico Rodrigues Martins; Łukasz Cywiński; Mark S. Rudner; Peter Nissen; Saeed Fallahi; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra; C. M. Marcus; Ferdinand Kuemmeth

1/\omega^\alpha


Physical Review X | 2018

Spin of a Multielectron Quantum Dot and Its Interaction with a Neighboring Electron

Filip K. Malinowski; Frederico Rodrigues Martins; Thomas B. Smith; Stephen D. Bartlett; Andrew C. Doherty; Peter Nissen; Saeed Fallahi; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra; C. M. Marcus; Ferdinand Kuemmeth

charge noise and find good agreement with recent experimental findings. This comparison shows the efficacy of our approach in describing real systems and additionally highlights the challenges with distinguishing different types of noise in free induction decay experiments.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018

Fast spin exchange between two distant quantum dots.

Filip K. Malinowski; Frederico Rodrigues Martins; Thomas B. Smith; Stephen D. Bartlett; Andrew C. Doherty; Peter Nissen; Saeed Fallahi; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra; C. M. Marcus; Ferdinand Kuemmeth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Long-range exchange coupling for spin qubits

Filip K. Malinowski; Frederico Rodrigues Martins; Thomas Smith; Andrew C. Doherty; Stephen D. Bartlett; Peter Nissen; Saeed Fallahi; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra; C. M. Marcus; Ferdinand Kuemmeth


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2017

Spectrum of the GaAs nuclear environment

Filip K. Malinowski; Frederico Rodrigues Martins; Łukasz Cywiński; Mark S. Rudner; Peter Nissen; Saeed Fallahi; Geoffrey C. Gardner; Michael J. Manfra; C. M. Marcus; Ferdinand Kuemmeth

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C. M. Marcus

University of Copenhagen

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Frederico Rodrigues Martins

Université catholique de Louvain

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Peter Nissen

University of Copenhagen

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