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Dive into the research topics where Thaddeus D. Ladd is active.

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Featured researches published by Thaddeus D. Ladd.


Nature | 2008

Complete quantum control of a single quantum dot spin using ultrafast optical pulses

David Press; Thaddeus D. Ladd; Bingyang Zhang; Yoshihisa Yamamoto

A basic requirement for quantum information processing systems is the ability to completely control the state of a single qubit. For qubits based on electron spin, a universal single-qubit gate is realized by a rotation of the spin by any angle about an arbitrary axis. Driven, coherent Rabi oscillations between two spin states can be used to demonstrate control of the rotation angle. Ramsey interference, produced by two coherent spin rotations separated by a variable time delay, demonstrates control over the axis of rotation. Full quantum control of an electron spin in a quantum dot has previously been demonstrated using resonant radio-frequency pulses that require many spin precession periods. However, optical manipulation of the spin allows quantum control on a picosecond or femtosecond timescale, permitting an arbitrary rotation to be completed within one spin precession period. Recent work in optical single-spin control has demonstrated the initialization of a spin state in a quantum dot, as well as the ultrafast manipulation of coherence in a largely unpolarized single-spin state. Here we demonstrate complete coherent control over an initialized electron spin state in a quantum dot using picosecond optical pulses. First we vary the intensity of a single optical pulse to observe over six Rabi oscillations between the two spin states; then we apply two sequential pulses to observe high-contrast Ramsey interference. Such a two-pulse sequence realizes an arbitrary single-qubit gate completed on a picosecond timescale. Along with the spin initialization and final projective measurement of the spin state, these results demonstrate a complete set of all-optical single-qubit operations.


Nature | 2012

Coherent singlet-triplet oscillations in a silicon-based double quantum dot

Brett M. Maune; Matthew G. Borselli; Biqin Huang; Thaddeus D. Ladd; Peter W. Deelman; Kevin S. Holabird; Andrey A. Kiselev; Ivan Alvarado-Rodriguez; Richard S. Ross; A. Schmitz; Marko Sokolich; Christopher A. Watson; Mark F. Gyure; Andrew T. Hunter

Silicon is more than the dominant material in the conventional microelectronics industry: it also has potential as a host material for emerging quantum information technologies. Standard fabrication techniques already allow the isolation of single electron spins in silicon transistor-like devices. Although this is also possible in other materials, silicon-based systems have the advantage of interacting more weakly with nuclear spins. Reducing such interactions is important for the control of spin quantum bits because nuclear fluctuations limit quantum phase coherence, as seen in recent experiments in GaAs-based quantum dots. Advances in reducing nuclear decoherence effects by means of complex control still result in coherence times much shorter than those seen in experiments on large ensembles of impurity-bound electrons in bulk silicon crystals. Here we report coherent control of electron spins in two coupled quantum dots in an undoped Si/SiGe heterostructure and show that this system has a nuclei-induced dephasing time of 360 nanoseconds, which is an increase by nearly two orders of magnitude over similar measurements in GaAs-based quantum dots. The degree of phase coherence observed, combined with fast, gated electrical initialization, read-out and control, should motivate future development of silicon-based quantum information processors.


Physical Review Letters | 2002

All-Silicon Quantum Computer

Thaddeus D. Ladd; J. R. Goldman; F. Yamaguchi; Yoshihisa Yamamoto; Eisuke Abe; Kohei M. Itoh

A solid-state implementation of a quantum computer composed entirely of silicon is proposed. Qubits are 29Si nuclear spins arranged as chains in a 28Si (spin-0) matrix with Larmor frequencies separated by a large magnetic field gradient. No impurity dopants or electrical contacts are needed. Initialization is accomplished by optical pumping, algorithmic cooling, and pseudo-pure state techniques. Magnetic resonance force microscopy is used for ensemble measurement.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Hybrid quantum repeater using bright coherent light.

P. van Loock; Thaddeus D. Ladd; Kaoru Sanaka; F. Yamaguchi; Kae Nemoto; William J. Munro; Yoshihisa Yamamoto

We describe a quantum repeater protocol for long-distance quantum communication. In this scheme, entanglement is created between qubits at intermediate stations of the channel by using a weak dispersive light-matter interaction and distributing the outgoing bright coherent-light pulses among the stations. Noisy entangled pairs of electronic spin are then prepared with high success probability via homodyne detection and postselection. The local gates for entanglement purification and swapping are deterministic and measurement-free, based upon the same coherent-light resources and weak interactions as for the initial entanglement distribution. Finally, the entanglement is stored in a nuclear-spin-based quantum memory. With our system, qubit-communication rates approaching 100 Hz over 1280 km with fidelities near 99% are possible for reasonable local gate errors.


Physical Review X | 2012

Layered architecture for quantum computing

N. Cody Jones; Rodney Van Meter; Austin G. Fowler; Peter L. McMahon; Jungsang Kim; Thaddeus D. Ladd; Yoshihisa Yamamoto

We develop a layered quantum computer architecture, which is a systematic framework for tackling the individual challenges of developing a quantum computer while constructing a cohesive device design. We discuss many of the prominent techniques for implementing circuit-model quantum computing and introduce several new methods, with an emphasis on employing surface code quantum error correction. In doing so, we propose a new quantum computer architecture based on optical control of quantum dots. The timescales of physical hardware operations and logical, error-corrected quantum gates differ by several orders of magnitude. By dividing functionality into layers, we can design and analyze subsystems independently, demonstrating the value of our layered architectural approach. Using this concrete hardware platform, we provide resource analysis for executing fault-tolerant quantum algorithms for integer factoring and quantum simulation, finding that the quantum dot architecture we study could solve such problems on the timescale of days.


New Journal of Physics | 2006

Hybrid quantum repeater based on dispersive CQED interactions between matter qubits and bright coherent light

Thaddeus D. Ladd; P. van Loock; Kae Nemoto; William J. Munro; Yoshihisa Yamamoto

We describe a system for long-distance distribution of quantum entanglement, in which coherent light with large average photon number interacts dispersively with single, far-detuned atoms or semiconductor impurities in optical cavities. Entanglement is heralded by homodyne detection using a second bright light pulse for phase reference. The use of bright pulses leads to a high success probability for the generation of entanglement, at the cost of a lower initial fidelity. This fidelity may be boosted by entanglement purification techniques, implemented with the same physical resources. The need for more purification steps is well compensated for by the increased probability of success when compared to heralded entanglement schemes using single photons or weak coherent pulses with realistic detectors. The principal cause of the lower initial fidelity is fibre loss; however, spontaneous decay and cavity losses during the dispersive atom–cavity interactions can also impair performance. We show that these effects may be minimized for emitter-cavity systems in the weak-coupling regime as long as the resonant Purcell factor is larger than one, the cavity is over-coupled, and the optical pulses are sufficiently long. We support this claim with numerical, semiclassical calculations using parameters for three realistic systems: optically bright donor-bound impurities such as 19F:ZnSe with a moderate-Q microcavity, the optically dim 31P:Si system with a high-Q microcavity, and trapped ions in large but very high-Q cavities.


Physical Review B | 2005

Coherence time of decoupled nuclear spins in silicon

Thaddeus D. Ladd; Denis Maryenko; Yoshihisa Yamamoto; Eisuke Abe; Kohei M. Itoh

We report NMR experiments using high-power, RF decoupling techniques to show that a 29-Si nuclear spin qubit in a solid silicon crystal at room temperature can preserve quantum phase for 10^9 precessional periods. The coherence times we report are longer than for any other observed solid-state qubit by more than four orders of magnitude. In high quality crystals, these times are limited by residual dipolar couplings and can be further improved by isotopic depletion. In defect-heavy samples, we provide evidence for decoherence limited by 1/f noise. These results provide insight toward proposals for solid-state nuclear-spin-based quantum memories and quantum computers based on silicon.


Science Advances | 2015

Isotopically enhanced triple-quantum-dot qubit

Kevin Eng; Thaddeus D. Ladd; Aaron Smith; Matthew G. Borselli; Andrey A. Kiselev; Bryan H. Fong; Kevin S. Holabird; Thomas M. Hazard; Biqin Huang; Peter W. Deelman; I. Milosavljevic; A. Schmitz; Richard S. Ross; Mark F. Gyure; Andrew T. Hunter

Three coupled quantum dots in isotopically purified silicon enable all-electrical qubit control with long coherence time. Like modern microprocessors today, future processors of quantum information may be implemented using all-electrical control of silicon-based devices. A semiconductor spin qubit may be controlled without the use of magnetic fields by using three electrons in three tunnel-coupled quantum dots. Triple dots have previously been implemented in GaAs, but this material suffers from intrinsic nuclear magnetic noise. Reduction of this noise is possible by fabricating devices using isotopically purified silicon. We demonstrate universal coherent control of a triple-quantum-dot qubit implemented in an isotopically enhanced Si/SiGe heterostructure. Composite pulses are used to implement spin-echo type sequences, and differential charge sensing enables single-shot state readout. These experiments demonstrate sufficient control with sufficiently low noise to enable the long pulse sequences required for exchange-only two-qubit logic and randomized benchmarking.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Quantum Computers Based on Electron Spins Controlled by Ultrafast Off-Resonant Single Optical Pulses

Susan M. Clark; Kai Mei C Fu; Thaddeus D. Ladd; Yoshihisa Yamamoto

We describe a fast quantum computer based on optically controlled electron spins in charged quantum dots that are coupled to microcavities. This scheme uses broadband optical pulses to rotate electron spins and provide the clock signal to the system. Nonlocal two-qubit gates are performed by phase shifts induced by electron spins on laser pulses propagating along a shared waveguide. Numerical simulations of this scheme demonstrate high-fidelity single-qubit and two-qubit gates with operation times comparable to the inverse Zeeman frequency.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Reduced Sensitivity to Charge Noise in Semiconductor Spin Qubits via Symmetric Operation.

M. D. Reed; Brett M. Maune; R. W. Andrews; Matthew G. Borselli; Kevin Eng; M. P. Jura; Andrey A. Kiselev; Thaddeus D. Ladd; S. T. Merkel; I. Milosavljevic; E. J. Pritchett; M. T. Rakher; Richard S. Ross; A. Schmitz; A. Smith; J. A. Wright; Mark F. Gyure; Andrew T. Hunter

We demonstrate improved operation of exchange-coupled semiconductor quantum dots by substantially reducing the sensitivity of exchange operations to charge noise. The method involves biasing a double dot symmetrically between the charge-state anticrossings, where the derivative of the exchange energy with respect to gate voltages is minimized. Exchange remains highly tunable by adjusting the tunnel coupling. We find that this method reduces the dephasing effect of charge noise by more than a factor of 5 in comparison to operation near a charge-state anticrossing, increasing the number of observable exchange oscillations in our qubit by a similar factor. Performance also improves with exchange rate, favoring fast quantum operations.

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K. Lischka

University of Paderborn

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M. Kamp

University of Würzburg

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