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Dive into the research topics where Jacob M. Taylor is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacob M. Taylor.


Nature Photonics | 2011

Generation of ultrastable microwaves via optical frequency division

Tara M. Fortier; Matthew S. Kirchner; Franklyn Quinlan; Jacob M. Taylor; J. C. Bergquist; T. Rosenband; Nathan D. Lemke; Andrew D. Ludlow; Yanyi Jiang; Christopher W. Oates; Scott A. Diddams

Researchers demonstrate a microwave generator based on a high-Q optical resonator and a frequency comb functioning as an optical-to-microwave divider. They generate 10 GHz electrical signals with a fractional frequency instability of ≤8 × 10−16 at 1 s.


Nature Photonics | 2013

Imaging topological edge states in silicon photonics

Mohammad Hafezi; Sunil Mittal; Jingyun Fan; Alan L. Migdall; Jacob M. Taylor

Topological edge states of light are observed in a two-dimensional array of coupled optical ring resonators, which induce a virtual magnetic field for photons using silicon-on-insulator technology. The edge states are experimentally demonstrated to be robust against intrinsic and introduced disorder, which is a hallmark of topological order.


Nature Physics | 2011

Robust optical delay lines with topological protection

Mohammad Hafezi; Eugene Demler; Mikhail D. Lukin; Jacob M. Taylor

The robustness of edge states against external influence is a phenomenon that has been successfully applied to electron transport. A study now predicts that the same concept can also lead to improved optical devices. Topological protection might, for example, reduce the deleterious influence of disorder on coupled-resonator optical waveguides.


Nature | 2014

Optical detection of radio waves through a nanomechanical transducer

Tolga Bagci; Anders Simonsen; Silvan Schmid; Louis G. Villanueva; Emil Zeuthen; Jürgen Appel; Jacob M. Taylor; Anders S. Sørensen; Koji Usami; Albert Schliesser; E. S. Polzik

Low-loss transmission and sensitive recovery of weak radio-frequency and microwave signals is a ubiquitous challenge, crucial in radio astronomy, medical imaging, navigation, and classical and quantum communication. Efficient up-conversion of radio-frequency signals to an optical carrier would enable their transmission through optical fibres instead of through copper wires, drastically reducing losses, and would give access to the set of established quantum optical techniques that are routinely used in quantum-limited signal detection. Research in cavity optomechanics has shown that nanomechanical oscillators can couple strongly to either microwave or optical fields. Here we demonstrate a room-temperature optoelectromechanical transducer with both these functionalities, following a recent proposal using a high-quality nanomembrane. A voltage bias of less than 10 V is sufficient to induce strong coupling between the voltage fluctuations in a radio-frequency resonance circuit and the membrane’s displacement, which is simultaneously coupled to light reflected off its surface. The radio-frequency signals are detected as an optical phase shift with quantum-limited sensitivity. The corresponding half-wave voltage is in the microvolt range, orders of magnitude less than that of standard optical modulators. The noise of the transducer—beyond the measured Johnson noise of the resonant circuit—consists of the quantum noise of light and thermal fluctuations of the membrane, dominating the noise floor in potential applications in radio astronomy and nuclear magnetic imaging. Each of these contributions is inferred to be when balanced by choosing an electromechanical cooperativity of with an optical power of 1 mW. The noise temperature of the membrane is divided by the cooperativity. For the highest observed cooperativity of , this leads to a projected noise temperature of 40 mK and a sensitivity limit of . Our approach to all-optical, ultralow-noise detection of classical electronic signals sets the stage for coherent up-conversion of low-frequency quantum signals to the optical domain.


Physical Review B | 2010

Coherent spin manipulation in an exchange-only qubit

Edward Laird; Jacob M. Taylor; C. M. Marcus; M. Hanson; A. C. Gossard

Initialization, two-spin coherent manipulation, and readout of a three-spin qubit are demonstrated using a few-electron triple quantum dot. The three-spin qubit is designed to allow all operations for full qubit control to be tuned via nearest-neighbor exchange interaction. Fast readout of charge states takes advantage of multiplexed reflectometry. Decoherence measured in a two-spin subspace is found to be consistent with predictions based on gate voltage noise with a uniform power spectrum. The theory of the exchange-only qubit is developed and it is shown that initialization of only two spins suffices for operation. Requirements for full multiqubit control using only exchange and electrostatic interactions are outlined.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Topologically Robust Transport of Photons in a Synthetic Gauge Field

Sunil Mittal; Jingyun Fan; Sanli Faez; Alan L. Migdall; Jacob M. Taylor; Mohammad Hafezi

Electronic transport is localized in low-dimensional disordered media. The addition of gauge fields to disordered media leads to fundamental changes in the transport properties. We implement a synthetic gauge field for photons using silicon-on-insulator technology. By determining the distribution of transport properties, we confirm that waves are localized in the bulk and localization is suppressed in edge states. Our system provides a new platform for investigating the transport properties of photons in the presence of synthetic gauge fields.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Quantum-Dot-Based Resonant Exchange Qubit

James Medford; J. Beil; Jacob M. Taylor; Emmanuel I. Rashba; Hong Lu; A. C. Gossard; C. M. Marcus

J. Medford, J. Beil, J. M. Taylor, E. I. Rashba, H. Lu, A. C. Gossard, and C. M. Marcus Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA Center for Quantum Devices, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 5, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark Joint Quantum Institute/NIST, College Park, MD, USA Materials Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA (Dated: May 22, 2014)


Optics Express | 2014

Ultra-sensitive chip-based photonic temperature sensor using ring resonator structures

Haitan Xu; Mohammad Hafezi; Jingyun Fan; Jacob M. Taylor; Gregory F. Strouse; Zeeshan Ahmed

Resistance thermometry provides a time-tested method for taking temperature measurements. However, fundamental limits to resistance-based approaches has produced considerable interest in developing photonic temperature sensors to leverage advances in frequency metrology and to achieve greater mechanical and environmental stability. Here we show that silicon-based optical ring resonator devices can resolve temperature differences of 1 mK using the traditional wavelength scanning methodology. An even lower noise floor of 80 μK for measuring temperature difference is achieved in the side-of-fringe, constant power mode measurement.


Science | 2018

Resonantly driven CNOT gate for electron spins

D. M. Zajac; A. J. Sigillito; Maximilian Russ; Felix Borjans; Jacob M. Taylor; Guido Burkard; J. R. Petta

Building an essential quantum component To build a universal quantum computer—the kind that can handle any computational task you throw at it—an essential early step is to demonstrate the so-called CNOT gate, which acts on two qubits. Zajac et al. built an efficient CNOT gate by using electron spin qubits in silicon quantum dots, an implementation that is especially appealing because of its compatibility with existing semiconductor-based electronics (see the Perspective by Schreiber and Bluhm). To showcase the potential, the authors used the gate to create an entangled quantum state called the Bell state. Science, this issue p. 439; see also p. 393 A two-qubit gate essential for quantum computing is demonstrated in silicon quantum dots. Single-qubit rotations and two-qubit CNOT operations are crucial ingredients for universal quantum computing. Although high-fidelity single-qubit operations have been achieved using the electron spin degree of freedom, realizing a robust CNOT gate has been challenging because of rapid nuclear spin dephasing and charge noise. We demonstrate an efficient resonantly driven CNOT gate for electron spins in silicon. Our platform achieves single-qubit rotations with fidelities greater than 99%, as verified by randomized benchmarking. Gate control of the exchange coupling allows a quantum CNOT gate to be implemented with resonant driving in ~200 nanoseconds. We used the CNOT gate to generate a Bell state with 78% fidelity (corrected for errors in state preparation and measurement). Our quantum dot device architecture enables multi-qubit algorithms in silicon.Single qubit rotations and two-qubit CNOT operations are crucial ingredients for universal quantum computing. While high fidelity single qubit operations have been achieved using the electron spin degree of freedom, realizing a robust CNOT gate has been a major challenge due to rapid nuclear spin dephasing and charge noise. We demonstrate an efficient resonantly-driven CNOT gate for electron spins in silicon. Our platform achieves single-qubit rotations with fidelities >99%, as verified by randomized benchmarking. Gate control of the exchange coupling allows a quantum CNOT gate to be implemented with resonant driving in ~200 ns. We use the CNOT gate to generate a Bell state with 75% fidelity, limited by quantum state readout. Our quantum dot device architecture opens the door to multi-qubit algorithms in silicon.


Science | 2015

Semiconductor Double Quantum Dot Micromaser

Y.-Y. Liu; J. Stehlik; C. Eichler; Michael Gullans; Jacob M. Taylor; J. R. Petta

Tunnel through and emit coherently The generation of coherent light (lasers and masers) forms the basis of a large optics industry. Liu et al. demonstrate a type of laser that is driven by the tunneling of single electrons in semiconductor double-quantum dots. Distinct from other existing semiconductor lasers, the emission mechanism is driven by tunneling of single charges between discrete energy levels that are electrically tunable. The ability to tune the levels by single-electron charging would allow their laser (or maser) to be turned on and off rapidly. Science, this issue p. 285 A coherent microwave source that is driven by the tunneling of single electrons is demonstrated. The coherent generation of light, from masers to lasers, relies upon the specific structure of the individual emitters that lead to gain. Devices operating as lasers in the few-emitter limit provide opportunities for understanding quantum coherent phenomena, from terahertz sources to quantum communication. Here we demonstrate a maser that is driven by single-electron tunneling events. Semiconductor double quantum dots (DQDs) serve as a gain medium and are placed inside a high-quality factor microwave cavity. We verify maser action by comparing the statistics of the emitted microwave field above and below the maser threshold.

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Michael Gullans

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Haitan Xu

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Thomas P. Purdy

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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C. M. Marcus

University of Copenhagen

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Jingyun Fan

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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John Lawall

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Karen E. Grutter

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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