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Dive into the research topics where Hartmut Häffner is active.

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Featured researches published by Hartmut Häffner.


Nature | 2004

Deterministic quantum teleportation with atoms

M. Riebe; Hartmut Häffner; Christian F. Roos; Wolfgang Hänsel; J. Benhelm; G. Lancaster; T. Körber; Christoph Becher; F. Schmidt-Kaler; Daniel F. V. James; R. Blatt

Teleportation of a quantum state encompasses the complete transfer of information from one particle to another. The complete specification of the quantum state of a system generally requires an infinite amount of information, even for simple two-level systems (qubits). Moreover, the principles of quantum mechanics dictate that any measurement on a system immediately alters its state, while yielding at most one bit of information. The transfer of a state from one system to another (by performing measurements on the first and operations on the second) might therefore appear impossible. However, it has been shown that the entangling properties of quantum mechanics, in combination with classical communication, allow quantum-state teleportation to be performed. Teleportation using pairs of entangled photons has been demonstrated, but such techniques are probabilistic, requiring post-selection of measured photons. Here, we report deterministic quantum-state teleportation between a pair of trapped calcium ions. Following closely the original proposal, we create a highly entangled pair of ions and perform a complete Bell-state measurement involving one ion from this pair and a third source ion. State reconstruction conditioned on this measurement is then performed on the other half of the entangled pair. The measured fidelity is 75%, demonstrating unequivocally the quantum nature of the process.


Nature | 2003

Realization of the Cirac-Zoller controlled-NOT quantum gate.

F. Schmidt-Kaler; Hartmut Häffner; M. Riebe; S. Gulde; G. Lancaster; T. Deuschle; Christoph Becher; Christian F. Roos; Jürgen Eschner; R. Blatt

Quantum computers have the potential to perform certain computational tasks more efficiently than their classical counterparts. The Cirac–Zoller proposal for a scalable quantum computer is based on a string of trapped ions whose electronic states represent the quantum bits of information (or qubits). In this scheme, quantum logical gates involving any subset of ions are realized by coupling the ions through their collective quantized motion. The main experimental step towards realizing the scheme is to implement the controlled-NOT (CNOT) gate operation between two individual ions. The CNOT quantum logical gate corresponds to the XOR gate operation of classical logic that flips the state of a target bit conditioned on the state of a control bit. Here we implement a CNOT quantum gate according to the Cirac–Zoller proposal. In our experiment, two 40Ca+ ions are held in a linear Paul trap and are individually addressed using focused laser beams; the qubits are represented by superpositions of two long-lived electronic states. Our work relies on recently developed precise control of atomic phases and the application of composite pulse sequences adapted from nuclear magnetic resonance techniques.


Nature | 2001

Dynamical tunnelling of ultracold atoms

W. K. Hensinger; Hartmut Häffner; A. Browaeys; N. R. Heckenberg; Kristian Helmerson; C. McKenzie; G. J. Milburn; William D. Phillips; S L. Rolston; Halina Rubinsztein-Dunlop; Ben Upcroft

The divergence of quantum and classical descriptions of particle motion is clearly apparent in quantum tunnelling between two regions of classically stable motion. An archetype of such non-classical motion is tunnelling through an energy barrier. In the 1980s, a new process, ‘dynamical’ tunnelling, was predicted, involving no potential energy barrier; however, a constant of the motion (other than energy) still forbids classically the quantum-allowed motion. This process should occur, for example, in periodically driven, nonlinear hamiltonian systems with one degree of freedom. Such systems may be chaotic, consisting of regions in phase space of stable, regular motion embedded in a sea of chaos. Previous studies predicted dynamical tunnelling between these stable regions. Here we observe dynamical tunnelling of ultracold atoms from a Bose–Einstein condensate in an amplitude-modulated optical standing wave. Atoms coherently tunnel back and forth between their initial state of oscillatory motion (corresponding to an island of regular motion) and the state oscillating 180° out of phase with the initial state.


Journal of Physics B | 2002

A Bose-Einstein condensate in an optical lattice

J. Hecker Denschlag; J E Simsarian; Hartmut Häffner; C. McKenzie; A. Browaeys; D. Cho; Kristian Helmerson; S L. Rolston; William D. Phillips

We have performed a number of experiments with a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) in a one-dimensional optical lattice. Making use of the small momentum spread of a BEC and standard atom optics techniques, a high level of coherent control over an artificial solid-state system is demonstrated. We are able to load the BEC into the lattice ground state with a very high efficiency by adiabatically turning on the optical lattice. We coherently transfer population between lattice states and observe their evolution. Methods are developed and used to perform band spectroscopy. We use these techniques to build a BEC accelerator and a novel, coherent, large-momentum-transfer beam-splitter.


Applied Physics B | 2003

How to realize a universal quantum gate with trapped ions

F. Schmidt-Kaler; Hartmut Häffner; S. Gulde; M. Riebe; G. Lancaster; T. Deuschle; Christoph Becher; Wolfgang Hänsel; J. Eschner; C. F. Roos; R. Blatt

We report the realization of an elementary quantum processor based on a linear crystal of trapped ions. Each ion serves as a quantum bit (qubit) to store the quantum information in long lived electronic states. We present the realization of single-qubit and of universal two-qubit logic gates. The two-qubit operation relies on the coupling of the ions through their collective quantized motion. A detailed description of the setup and the methods is included.


Physical Review Letters | 2002

Photoassociation of sodium in a Bose-Einstein condensate.

C. McKenzie; J. Hecker Denschlag; Hartmut Häffner; A. Browaeys; Luı́s E. E. de Araujo; Fredrik Kurosh Fatemi; Kevin M. Jones; J E. Simsarian; D. Cho; Andrea Simoni; Eite Tiesinga; Paul S. Julienne; Kristian Helmerson; Paul D. Lett; S L. Rolston; William D. Phillips

We form ultracold Na2 molecules by single-photon photoassociation of a Bose-Einstein condensate, measuring the photoassociation rate, linewidth, and light shift of the J = 1, v = 135 vibrational level of the A1 Sigma (+)(u) molecular state. The photoassociation rate constant increases linearly with intensity, even where it is predicted that many-body effects might limit the rate. Our observations are in good agreement with a two-body theory having no free parameters.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Collective Quantum Jumps of Rydberg Atoms

Tony E. Lee; Hartmut Häffner; M. C. Cross

We study an open quantum system of atoms with a long-range Rydberg interaction, laser driving, and spontaneous emission. Over time, the system occasionally jumps between a state of low Rydberg population and a state of high Rydberg population. The jumps are inherently collective, and in fact, exist only for a large number of atoms. We explain how entanglement and quantum measurement enable the jumps, which are otherwise classically forbidden.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Trapped ions in optical lattices for probing oscillator chain models

Thaned Pruttivarasin; Michael Ramm; Ishan Talukdar; Axel Kreuter; Hartmut Häffner

We show that a chain of trapped ions embedded in microtraps generated by an optical lattice can be used to study oscillator models related to dry friction and energy transport. Numerical calculations with realistic experimental parameters demonstrate that both static and dynamic properties of the ion chain change significantly as the optical lattice power is varied. Finally, we lay out an experimental scheme to use the spin degree of freedom to probe the phase space structure and quantum critical behavior of the ion chain.


Nature Physics | 2014

Local detection of quantum correlations with a single trapped ion

Manuel Gessner; Michael Ramm; Thaned Pruttivarasin; Andreas Buchleitner; H-P. Breuer; Hartmut Häffner

In open quantum systems the correlations between the system and its environment play an important role. A trapped-ion experiment demonstrates that these correlations can be detected without accessing or knowing anything about the environment or its interactions.


Physical Review A | 2009

Optimal control of entangling operations for trapped-ion quantum computing

Volckmar Nebendahl; Hartmut Häffner; C. F. Roos

Optimal control techniques are applied for the decomposition of unitary quantum operations into a sequence of single-qubit gates and entangling operations. To this end, we modify a gradient-ascent algorithm developed for systems of coupled nuclear spins in molecules to make it suitable for trapped-ion quantum computing. We decompose unitary operations into entangling gates that are based on a nonlinear collective spin operator and complemented by global spin flip and local light shift gates. Among others, we provide explicit decompositions of controlled-NOT and Toffoli gates, and a simple quantum error correction protocol.

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R. Blatt

University of Innsbruck

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C. F. Roos

University of Innsbruck

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M. Riebe

University of Innsbruck

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J. Benhelm

University of Innsbruck

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M. Chwalla

University of Innsbruck

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Michael Ramm

University of California

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