Wayne M. Itano
National Institute of Standards and Technology
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Featured researches published by Wayne M. Itano.
Nature | 2000
Ca Sackett; David Kielpinski; B. E. King; C. Langer; Meyer; C. J. Myatt; Mary A. Rowe; Q. A. Turchette; Wayne M. Itano; David J. Wineland; C. Monroe
Quantum mechanics allows for many-particle wavefunctions that cannot be factorized into a product of single-particle wavefunctions, even when the constituent particles are entirely distinct. Such ‘entangled’ states explicitly demonstrate the non-local character of quantum theory, having potential applications in high-precision spectroscopy, quantum communication, cryptography and computation. In general, the more particles that can be entangled, the more clearly nonclassical effects are exhibited—and the more useful the states are for quantum applications. Here we implement a recently proposed entanglement technique to generate entangled states of two and four trapped ions. Coupling between the ions is provided through their collective motional degrees of freedom, but actual motional excitation is minimized. Entanglement is achieved using a single laser pulse, and the method can in principle be applied to any number of ions.
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 | 2000
C. J. Myatt; B. E. King; Q. A. Turchette; C A. Sackett; David Kielpinski; Wayne M. Itano; C. Monroe; David J. Wineland
The theory of quantum mechanics applies to closed systems. In such ideal situations, a single atom can, for example, exist simultaneously in a superposition of two different spatial locations. In contrast, real systems always interact with their environment, with the consequence that macroscopic quantum superpositions (as illustrated by the ‘Schrödingers cat’ thought-experiment) are not observed. Moreover, macroscopic superpositions decay so quickly that even the dynamics of decoherence cannot be observed. However, mesoscopic systems offer the possibility of observing the decoherence of such quantum superpositions. Here we present measurements of the decoherence of superposed motional states of a single trapped atom. Decoherence is induced by coupling the atom to engineered reservoirs, in which the coupling and state of the environment are controllable. We perform three experiments, finding that the decoherence rate scales with the square of a quantity describing the amplitude of the superposition state.
Physical Review Letters | 1998
Q. A. Turchette; C. S. Wood; B. E. King; C. J. Myatt; D. Leibfried; Wayne M. Itano; C. Monroe; David J. Wineland
We have prepared the internal states of two trapped ions in both the Bell-like singlet and triplet entangled states. In contrast to all other experiments with entangled states of either massive particles or photons, we do this in a deterministic fashion, producing entangled states on demand without selection. The deterministic production of entangled states is a crucial prerequisite for large-scale quantum computation.
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.
Physical Review Letters | 1998
B. E. King; C. S. Wood; C. J. Myatt; Q. A. Turchette; D. Leibfried; Wayne M. Itano; C. Monroe; David J. Wineland
We report preparation in the ground state of collective modes of motion of two trapped
Physical Review A | 1997
C. Monroe; D. Leibfried; B. E. King; D. M. Meekhof; Wayne M. Itano; David J. Wineland
{}^{9}{mathrm{Be}}^{+}
Physical Review Letters | 1995
C. Monroe; D. M. Meekhof; B. E. King; Wayne M. Itano; David J. Wineland
ions. This is a crucial step towards realizing quantum logic gates which can entangle the ions internal electronic states. We find that heating of the modes of relative ion motion is substantially suppressed relative to that of the center-of-mass modes, suggesting the importance of these modes in future experiments.
Physical Review A | 1996
John J. Bollinger; Wayne M. Itano; David J. Wineland; D. J. Heinzen
Abstract : We describe a simplified scheme for quantum logic with a collection of laser-cooled trapped atomic ions. Building on the scheme of Cirac and Zoller, we show how the fundamental controlled-NOT gate between a collective mode of ion motion and the internal states of a single ion can be reduced to a single laser pulse, and the need for a third auxiliary internal electronic state can be eliminated.