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Dive into the research topics where J. D. Jost is active.

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Featured researches published by J. D. Jost.


Nature | 2004

Deterministic quantum teleportation of atomic qubits

M. D. Barrett; J. Chiaverini; Tobias Schaetz; J. Britton; Wayne M. Itano; J. D. Jost; Emanuel Knill; C. Langer; D. Leibfried; Roee Ozeri; David J. Wineland

Quantum teleportation provides a means to transport quantum information efficiently from one location to another, without the physical transfer of the associated quantum-information carrier. This is achieved by using the non-local correlations of previously distributed, entangled quantum bits (qubits). Teleportation is expected to play an integral role in quantum communication and quantum computation. Previous experimental demonstrations have been implemented with optical systems that used both discrete and continuous variables, and with liquid-state nuclear magnetic resonance. Here we report unconditional teleportation of massive particle qubits using atomic (9Be+) ions confined in a segmented ion trap, which aids individual qubit addressing. We achieve an average fidelity of 78 per cent, which exceeds the fidelity of any protocol that does not use entanglement. This demonstration is also important because it incorporates most of the techniques necessary for scalable quantum information processing in an ion-trap system.


Nature | 2005

Creation of a six-atom 'Schrödinger cat' state.

D. Leibfried; Emanuel Knill; S. Seidelin; J. Britton; R. B. Blakestad; J. Chiaverini; D. B. Hume; Wayne M. Itano; J. D. Jost; C. Langer; Roee Ozeri; R. Reichle; David J. Wineland

Among the classes of highly entangled states of multiple quantum systems, the so-called ‘Schrödinger cat’ states are particularly useful. Cat states are equal superpositions of two maximally different quantum states. They are a fundamental resource in fault-tolerant quantum computing and quantum communication, where they can enable protocols such as open-destination teleportation and secret sharing. They play a role in fundamental tests of quantum mechanics and enable improved signal-to-noise ratios in interferometry. Cat states are very sensitive to decoherence, and as a result their preparation is challenging and can serve as a demonstration of good quantum control. Here we report the creation of cat states of up to six atomic qubits. Each qubits state space is defined by two hyperfine ground states of a beryllium ion; the cat state corresponds to an entangled equal superposition of all the atoms in one hyperfine state and all atoms in the other hyperfine state. In our experiments, the cat states are prepared in a three-step process, irrespective of the number of entangled atoms. Together with entangled states of a different class created in Innsbruck, this work represents the current state-of-the-art for large entangled states in any qubit system.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Microfabricated surface-electrode ion trap for scalable quantum information processing.

S. Seidelin; John Chiaverini; R. Reichle; John J. Bollinger; D. Leibfried; J. Britton; Janus H. Wesenberg; R. B. Blakestad; Ryan Epstein; D. B. Hume; Wayne M. Itano; J. D. Jost; C. Langer; Roee Ozeri; N. Shiga; D. J. Wineland

Individual laser-cooled 24Mg+ ions are confined in a linear Paul trap with a novel geometry where gold electrodes are located in a single plane and the ions are trapped 40 microm above this plane. The relatively simple trap design and fabrication procedure are important for large-scale quantum information processing (QIP) using ions. Measured ion motional frequencies are compared to simulations. Measurements of ion recooling after cooling is temporarily suspended yield a heating rate of approximately 5 motional quanta per millisecond for a trap frequency of 2.83 MHz, sufficiently low to be useful for QIP.


Nature | 2004

Realization of quantum error correction

J Chiaverini; D. Leibfried; Tobias Schaetz; M. D. Barrett; R. B. Blakestad; J. Britton; Wayne M. Itano; J. D. Jost; Emanuel Knill; C. Langer; Roee Ozeri; David J. Wineland

Scalable quantum computation and communication require error control to protect quantum information against unavoidable noise. Quantum error correction protects information stored in two-level quantum systems (qubits) by rectifying errors with operations conditioned on the measurement outcomes. Error-correction protocols have been implemented in nuclear magnetic resonance experiments, but the inherent limitations of this technique prevent its application to quantum information processing. Here we experimentally demonstrate quantum error correction using three beryllium atomic-ion qubits confined to a linear, multi-zone trap. An encoded one-qubit state is protected against spin-flip errors by means of a three-qubit quantum error-correcting code. A primary ion qubit is prepared in an initial state, which is then encoded into an entangled state of three physical qubits (the primary and two ancilla qubits). Errors are induced simultaneously in all qubits at various rates. The encoded state is decoded back to the primary ion one-qubit state, making error information available on the ancilla ions, which are separated from the primary ion and measured. Finally, the primary qubit state is corrected on the basis of the ancillae measurement outcome. We verify error correction by comparing the corrected final state to the uncorrected state and to the initial state. In principle, the approach enables a quantum state to be maintained by means of repeated error correction, an important step towards scalable fault-tolerant quantum computation using trapped ions.


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Long-lived qubit memory using atomic ions

C. Langer; Roee Ozeri; J. D. Jost; J. Chiaverini; Brian DeMarco; A. Ben-Kish; R. B. Blakestad; J. Britton; D. B. Hume; Wayne M. Itano; D. Leibfried; R. Reichle; T. Rosenband; Tobias Schaetz; P. O. Schmidt; David J. Wineland

We demonstrate experimentally a robust quantum memory using a magnetic-field-independent hyperfine transition in 9Be+ atomic ion qubits at a magnetic field B approximately = 0.01194 T. We observe that the single physical qubit memory coherence time is greater than 10 s, an improvement of approximately 5 orders of magnitude from previous experiments with 9Be+. We also observe long coherence times of decoherence-free subspace logical qubits comprising two entangled physical qubits and discuss the merits of each type of qubit.


Physical Review A | 2008

Randomized benchmarking of quantum gates

Emanuel Knill; D. Leibfried; R. Reichle; J. Britton; R. B. Blakestad; J. D. Jost; C. Langer; Roee Ozeri; S. Seidelin; David J. Wineland

A key requirement for scalable quantum computing is that elementary quantum gates can be implemented with sufficiently low error. One method for determining the error behavior of a gate implementation is to perform process tomography. However, standard process tomography is limited by errors in state preparation, measurement and one-qubit gates. It suffers from inefficient scaling with number of qubits and does not detect adverse error-compounding when gates are composed in long sequences. An additional problem is due to the fact that desirable error probabilities for scalable quantum computing are of the order of 0.0001 or lower. Experimentally proving such low errors is challenging. We describe a randomized benchmarking method that yields estimates of the computationally relevant errors without relying on accurate state preparation and measurement. Since it involves long sequences of randomly chosen gates, it also verifies that error behavior is stable when used in long computations. We implemented randomized benchmarking on trapped atomic ion qubits, establishing a one-qubit error probability per randomized


Science | 2009

Complete Methods Set for Scalable Ion Trap Quantum Information Processing

J. P. Home; David Hanneke; J. D. Jost; Jason M. Amini; D. Leibfried; David J. Wineland

\ensuremath{\pi}/2


Optics Express | 2002

Continuously tunable, precise, single frequency optical signal generator

J. D. Jost; John L. Hall; J. Ye

pulse of 0.00482(17) in a particular experiment. We expect this error probability to be readily improved with straightforward technical modifications.


Nature | 2006

Experimental purification of two-atom entanglement

R. Reichle; D. Leibfried; Emanuel Knill; J. Britton; R. B. Blakestad; J. D. Jost; C. Langer; Roee Ozeri; S. Seidelin; David J. Wineland

Hi Fi Quantum Computing In quantum information processing, one goal is to control the entangled states of objects such that they can interact during logical operations but otherwise have minimal interactions with their environment. In one scheme for quantum computing, ions are trapped within and physically moved by electric fields. One drawback is that the entangled states can be sensitive to stray magnetic fields. Home et al. (p. 1227, published online 6 August 2009) show that coupling of the ions (in this case, 9Be+) with a second ion (24Mg+) can create states that are relatively insensitive to magnetic fields and also allows for recooling of the ions during operation. This approach can minimize the loss of fidelity that occurs during ion transport. Coupling of different ions creates states that are insensitive to stray magnetic fields and more robust for quantum computing. Large-scale quantum information processors must be able to transport and maintain quantum information and repeatedly perform logical operations. Here, we show a combination of all of the fundamental elements required to perform scalable quantum computing through the use of qubits stored in the internal states of trapped atomic ions. We quantified the repeatability of a multiple-qubit operation and observed no loss of performance despite qubit transport over macroscopic distances. Key to these results is the use of different pairs of 9Be+ hyperfine states for robust qubit storage, readout, and gates, and simultaneous trapping of 24Mg+ “re-cooling” ions along with the qubit ions.


Nature | 2009

Entangled mechanical oscillators

J. D. Jost; J. P. Home; Jason M. Amini; David Hanneke; Roee Ozeri; C. Langer; John J. Bollinger; D. Leibfried; David J. Wineland

To realize a genuine CW optical frequency synthesizer, a continuously tunable single-frequency CWlaser has been employed to track precisely any arbitrary component of a wide bandwidth phase-stabilized optical comb. We demonstrate experimentally two fundamental aspects of optical frequency synthesis, namely, precise setting of the laser frequency at an arbitrary pre-determined value, and continuous tuning of the laser frequency with the digital precision known in radio frequency synthesis. A typical computer-automated search-and-lock procedure finishes on oneminute time scale.

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D. Leibfried

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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C. Langer

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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J. Britton

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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David J. Wineland

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Wayne M. Itano

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Roee Ozeri

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Emanuel Knill

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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D. J. Wineland

University of Colorado Boulder

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