Tobias Schaetz
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Tobias Schaetz.
Nature | 2004
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 | 2004
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
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.
Reports on Progress in Physics | 2012
Ch. Schneider; Diego Porras; Tobias Schaetz
Direct experimental access to some of the most intriguing quantum phenomena is not granted due to the lack of precise control of the relevant parameters in their naturally intricate environment. Their simulation on conventional computers is impossible, since quantum behaviour arising with superposition states or entanglement is not efficiently translatable into the classical language. However, one could gain deeper insight into complex quantum dynamics by experimentally simulating the quantum behaviour of interest in another quantum system, where the relevant parameters and interactions can be controlled and robust effects detected sufficiently well. Systems of trapped ions provide unique control of both the internal (electronic) and external (motional) degrees of freedom. The mutual Coulomb interaction between the ions allows for large interaction strengths at comparatively large mutual ion distances enabling individual control and readout. Systems of trapped ions therefore exhibit a prominent system in several physical disciplines, for example, quantum information processing or metrology. Here, we will give an overview of different trapping techniques of ions as well as implementations for coherent manipulation of their quantum states and discuss the related theoretical basics. We then report on the experimental and theoretical progress in simulating quantum many-body physics with trapped ions and present current approaches for scaling up to more ions and more-dimensional systems.
Physical Review A | 2003
M. D. Barrett; Brian DeMarco; Tobias Schaetz; V. Meyer; D. Leibfried; J. Britton; J. Chiaverini; Wayne M. Itano; Branislav M. Jelenkovic; J. D. Jost; C. Langer; T. Rosenband; David J. Wineland
We demonstrate the cooling of a two species ion crystal consisting of one
Physical Review Letters | 2011
A. Bermudez; Tobias Schaetz; Diego Porras
^9Be^+
Nature Photonics | 2010
Ch. Schneider; Martin Enderlein; Thomas M. Huber; Tobias Schaetz
and one
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Govinda Clos; Diego Porras; U. Warring; Tobias Schaetz
^{24}Mg^+
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2005
David J. Wineland; D. Leibfried; M. D. Barrett; A. Ben-Kish; James C. Bergquist; R. B. Blakestad; John J. Bollinger; J. Britton; J. Chiaverini; Brian DeMarco; D. B. Hume; Wayne M. Itano; M. Jensen; J. D. Jost; Emanuel Knill; J.C.J. Koelemeij; C. Langer; W. Oskay; Roee Ozeri; R. Reichle; T. Rosenband; Tobias Schaetz; P. O. Schmidt; S. Seidelin
ion. Since the respective cooling transitions of these two species are separated by more than 30 nm, laser manipulation of one ion has negligible effect on the other even when the ions are not individually addressed. As such this is a useful system for re-initializing the motional state in an ion trap quantum computer without affecting the qubit information. Additionally, we have found that the mass difference between ions enables a novel method for detecting and subsequently eliminating the effects of radio frequency (RF) micro-motion.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
A. Bermudez; Tobias Schaetz; Martin B. Plenio
The vibrations of a collection of ions in a microtrap array can be described in terms of tunneling phonons. We show that the vibrational couplings may be tailored by using a gradient of the trap frequencies together with a periodic driving of the trapping potentials. These ingredients allow us to induce effective gauge fields on the vibrational excitations, such that phonons mimic the behavior of charged particles in a magnetic field. In particular, microtrap arrays are well suited to realize a quantum simulator of the famous Aharonov-Bohm effect and observe the paradigmatic edge states typical from quantum-Hall samples and topological insulators.