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Dive into the research topics where John Chiaverini is active.

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Featured researches published by John Chiaverini.


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.


Physical Review A | 2008

Laserless trapped-ion quantum simulations without spontaneous scattering using microtrap arrays

John Chiaverini; W. E. Lybarger Jr

We propose an architecture and methodology for large-scale quantum simulations using hyperfine states of trapped-ions in an arbitrary-layout microtrap array with laserless interactions. An ion is trapped at each site, and the electrode structure provides for the application of single and pairwise evolution operators using only locally created microwave and radio-frequency fields. The avoidance of short-lived atomic levels during evolution effectively eliminates errors due to spontaneous scattering; this may allow scaling of quantum simulators based on trapped ions to much larger systems than currently estimated. Such a configuration may also be particularly appropriate for one-way quantum computing with trapped-ion cluster states.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2016

Integrated optical addressing of an ion qubit

Karan Mehta; Colin Bruzewicz; Robert McConnell; Rajeev J. Ram; Jeremy M. Sage; John Chiaverini

The long coherence times and strong Coulomb interactions afforded by trapped ion qubits have enabled realizations of the necessary primitives for quantum information processing and the highest-fidelity quantum operations in any qubit to date. Although light delivery to each individual ion in a system is essential for general quantum manipulations and readout, experiments so far have employed optical systems that are cumbersome to scale to even a few tens of qubits. Here we demonstrate lithographically defined nanophotonic waveguide devices for light routing and ion addressing that are fully integrated within a surface-electrode ion trap chip. Ion qubits are addressed at multiple locations via focusing grating couplers emitting through openings in the trap electrodes to ions trapped 50 μm above the chip; using this light, we perform quantum coherent operations on the optical qubit transition in individual 88Sr+ ions. The grating focuses the beam to a diffraction-limited spot near the ion position with 2 μm 1/e2 radius along the trap axis, and we measure crosstalk errors between 10-2 and 4 × 10-4 at distances 7.5-15 μm from the beam centre. Owing to the scalability of the planar fabrication technique employed, together with the tight focusing and stable alignment afforded by the integration of the optics within the trap chip, this approach presents a path to creating the optical systems required for large-scale trapped-ion quantum information processing.


Physical Review A | 2012

Loading of a surface-electrode ion trap from a remote, precooled source

Jeremy M. Sage; Andrew J. Kerman; John Chiaverini

We demonstrate loading of ions into a surface-electrode trap (SET) from a remote, laser-cooled source of neutral atoms. We first cool and load


Nature Communications | 2016

Scalable loading of a two-dimensional trapped-ion array

Colin Bruzewicz; Robert McConnell; John Chiaverini; Jeremy M. Sage

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Physical Review A | 2015

Reduction of trapped ion anomalous heating by in situ surface plasma cleaning

Robert McConnell; Colin Bruzewicz; John Chiaverini; Jeremy M. Sage


Physical Review A | 2006

Lower bounds for the fidelity of entangled-state preparation

Rolando D. Somma; John Chiaverini; Dana Berkeland

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Frontiers in Biological Detection: From Nanosensors to Systems X | 2018

Multi-layer integrated photonics from the ultraviolet to the infrared

Jeremy M. Sage; Suraj Bramhavar; John Chiaverini; Paul W. Juodawlkis; Dave Kharas; William Loh; Cheryl Sorace-Agaskar

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Quantum Information and Measurement | 2017

Solid-State Integrated Optics for Large-Scale Trapped-Ion Quantum Information Processing

Karan Mehta; Robert McConnell; Colin Bruzewicz; Gavin N. West; Rajeev J. Ram; Jeremy M. Sage; John Chiaverini

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Physical Review A | 2011

Precision measurement of the 52S1/2– 42D5/2quadrupole transition isotope shift betweenSr88+andSr86+

Warren Lybarger; J. C. Berengut; John Chiaverini

Sr atoms into a magneto-optical trap from an oven that has no line of sight with the SET. The cold atoms are then pushed with a resonant laser into the trap region where they are subsequently photoionized and trapped in an SET operated at a cryogenic temperature of 4.6 K. We present studies of the loading process and show that our technique achieves ion loading into a shallow (15 meV depth) trap at rates as high as 125 ions/s while drastically reducing the amount of metal deposition on the trap surface as compared with direct loading from a hot vapor. Furthermore, we note that due to multiple stages of isotopic filtering in our loading process, this technique has the potential for enhanced isotopic selectivity over other loading methods. Rapid loading from a clean, isotopically pure, and precooled source may enable scalable quantum information processing with trapped ions in large, low-depth surface trap arrays that are not amenable to loading from a hot atomic beam.

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Robert McConnell

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Colin Bruzewicz

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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D. Leibfried

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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J. D. Jost

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Wayne M. Itano

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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D. J. Wineland

University of Colorado Boulder

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Roee Ozeri

Weizmann Institute of Science

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