James Medford
Harvard University
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Publication
Featured researches published by James Medford.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
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)
Physical Review B | 2010
Christian Barthel; M. Kjærgaard; James Medford; M. Stopa; C. M. Marcus; M. Hanson; A. C. Gossard
Single-shot measurement of the charge arrangement and spin state of a double quantum dot are reported, with measurement times down to ~ 100 ns. Sensing uses radio-frequency reflectometry of a proximal quantum dot in the Coulomb blockade regime. The sensor quantum dot is up to 30 times more sensitive than a comparable quantum point contact sensor, and yields three times greater signal to noise in rf single-shot measurements. Numerical modeling is qualitatively consistent with experiment and shows that the improved sensitivity of the sensor quantum dot results from reduced screening and lifetime broadening.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
James Medford; Cywiński Ł; Christian Barthel; C. M. Marcus; M. Hanson; A. C. Gossard
We investigate the scaling of coherence time T(2) with the number of π pulses n(π) in a singlet-triplet spin qubit using Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) and concatenated dynamical decoupling (CDD) pulse sequences. For an even numbers of CPMG pulses, we find a power law T(2) is proportional to (n(π))(γ(e)), with γ(e)=0.72±0.01, essentially independent of the envelope function used to extract T(2). From this surprisingly robust value, a power-law model of the noise spectrum of the environment, S(ω)~ω(-β), yields β=γ(e)/(1-γ(e))=2.6±0.1. Model values for T(2)(n(π)) using β=2.6 for CPMG with both even and odd n(π) up to 32 and CDD orders 3 through 6 compare very well with the experiment.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
I. Van Weperen; B. D. Armstrong; Edward Laird; James Medford; C. M. Marcus; M. Hanson; A. C. Gossard
We report coherent operation of a singlet-triplet qubit controlled by the spatial arrangement of two confined electrons in an adjacent double quantum dot that is electrostatically coupled to the qubit. This four-dot system is the specific device geometry needed for two-qubit operations of a two-electron spin qubit. We extract the strength of the capacitive coupling between qubit and adjacent double quantum dot and show that the present geometry allows fast conditional gate operation, opening pathways toward implementation of a universal set of gates for singlet-triplet spin qubits.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Jacob M. Taylor; Srinivasa; James Medford
We present a modulated microwave approach for quantum computing with qubits comprising three spins in a triple quantum dot. This approach includes single- and two-qubit gates that are protected against low-frequency electrical noise, due to an operating point with a narrowband response to high frequency electric fields. Furthermore, existing double quantum dot advances, including robust preparation and measurement via spin-to-charge conversion, are immediately applicable to the new qubit. Finally, the electric dipole terms implicit in the high frequency coupling enable strong coupling with superconducting microwave resonators, leading to more robust two-qubit gates.
Physical Review B | 2012
Christian Barthel; James Medford; Hendrik Bluhm; Amir Yacoby; C. M. Marcus; M. Hanson; A. C. Gossard
Using single-shot charge detection in a GaAs double quantum dot, we investigate spin relaxation time T_1 and readout visibility of a two-electron singlet-triplet qubit following single-electron dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP). For magnetic fields up to 2 T, the DNP cycle is in all cases found to increase Overhauser field gradients, which in turn decrease T_1 and consequently reduce readout visibility. This effect was previously attributed to a suppression of singlet-triplet dephasing under a similar DNP cycle. A model describing relaxation after singlet-triplet mixing agrees well with experiment. Effects of pulse bandwidth on visibility are also investigated.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
Christian Barthel; James Medford; C. M. Marcus; M. Hanson; A. C. Gossard
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
M.J.A. Stoutimore; James Medford; Quentin P. Herr; Ofer Naaman; Harold Hearne; Joel Strand; Anthony Przybysz; Aaron A. Pesetski; John X. Przybysz
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Alexander Marakov; Mark E. Nowakowski; Timothy Manning; M.J.A. Stoutimore; Aaron M. Lee; Moe Khalil; James Medford; Anthony Przybysz
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
James Medford