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Dive into the research topics where Yufei Ge is active.

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Featured researches published by Yufei Ge.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Suppression of Heating Rates in Cryogenic Surface-Electrode Ion Traps

Jaroslaw Labaziewicz; Yufei Ge; Paul Antohi; David R. Leibrandt; Kenneth R. Brown; Isaac L. Chuang

Dense arrays of trapped ions provide one way of scaling up ion trap quantum information processing. However, miniaturization of ion traps is currently limited by sharply increasing motional state decoherence at sub-100 mum ion-electrode distances. We characterize heating rates in cryogenically cooled surface-electrode traps, with characteristic sizes in the 75 to 150 mum range. Upon cooling to 6 K, the measured rates are suppressed by 7 orders of magnitude, 2 orders of magnitude below previously published data of similarly sized traps operated at room temperature. The observed noise depends strongly on the fabrication process, which suggests further improvements are possible.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Temperature Dependence of Electric Field Noise Above Gold Surfaces

Jaroslaw Labaziewicz; Yufei Ge; David R. Leibrandt; Shannon X. Wang; Ruth Shewmon; Isaac L. Chuang

Electric field noise from fluctuating patch potentials is a significant problem for a broad range of precision experiments, including trapped ion quantum computation and single spin detection. Recent results demonstrated strong suppression of this noise by cryogenic cooling, suggesting an underlying thermal process. We present measurements characterizing the temperature and frequency dependence of the noise from 7 to 100 K, using a single Sr+ ion trapped 75 mum above the surface of a gold plated surface electrode ion trap. The noise amplitude is observed to have an approximate 1/f spectrum around 1 MHz, and grows rapidly with temperature as T;{beta} for beta from 2 to 4. The data are consistent with microfabricated cantilever measurements of noncontact friction but do not extrapolate to the dc measurements with neutral atoms or contact potential probes.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2009

Cryogenic ion trapping systems with surface-electrode traps.

Paul Antohi; David Schuster; Gleb M. Akselrod; Jaroslaw Labaziewicz; Yufei Ge; Ziliang Lin; Waseem Bakr; Isaac L. Chuang

We present two simple cryogenic rf ion trap systems in which cryogenic temperatures and ultra high vacuum pressures can be reached in as little as 12 h. The ion traps are operated either in a liquid helium bath cryostat or in a low vibration closed cycle cryostat. The fast turn around time and availability of buffer gas cooling made the systems ideal for testing surface-electrode ion traps. The vibration amplitude of the closed cycled cryostat was found to be below 106 nm. We evaluated the systems by loading surface-electrode ion traps with (88)Sr(+) ions using laser ablation, which is compatible with the cryogenic environment. Using Doppler cooling we observed small ion crystals in which optically resolved ions have a trapped lifetime over 2500 min.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

Individual addressing of ions using magnetic field gradients in a surface-electrode ion trap

Shannon X. Wang; Jaroslaw Labaziewicz; Yufei Ge; Ruth Shewmon; Isaac L. Chuang

A dense array of ions in microfabricated traps represents one possible way to scale up ion trap quantum computing. The ability to address individual ions is an important component of such a scheme. We demonstrate individual addressing of trapped ions in a microfabricated surface-electrode trap using a magnetic field gradient generated on-chip. A frequency splitting of 310(2) kHz for two ions separated by 5 μm is achieved. Selective single qubit operations are performed on one of two trapped ions with an average of 2.2(±1.0%) crosstalk. Coherence time is reduced by the magnetic field gradient, but the spin-echo technique effectively restores the coherence time.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Superconducting microfabricated ion traps

Shannon X. Wang; Yufei Ge; Jaroslaw Labaziewicz; Eric A. Dauler; Karl K. Berggren; Isaac L. Chuang

Wang, Shannon X. et al. “Superconducting Microfabricated Ion Traps.” Applied Physics Letters 97.24 (2010): 244102.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

One-dimensional array of ion chains coupled to an optical cavity

Marko Cetina; Alexei Bylinskii; Leon Karpa; Dorian Gangloff; Kristin Beck; Yufei Ge; Matthias Scholz; Andrew T. Grier; Isaac L. Chuang; Vladan Vuletic

We present a novel system where an optical cavity is integrated with amicrofabricatedplanar-electrode iontrap.The trapelectrodesproduceatunable periodic potential allowing the trapping of up to 50 separate ion chains aligned with the cavity and spaced by 160µm in a one-dimensional array along the cavity axis. Each chain can contain up to 20 individually addressable Yb + ions coupled to the cavity mode. We demonstrate deterministic distribution of ions between the sites of the electrostatic periodic potential and control of the ion-cavity coupling. The measured strength of this coupling should allow access to the strong collective coupling regime with .10 ions. The optical cavity could serve as a quantum information bus between ions or be used to generate a strong wavelength-scale periodic optical potential.


Optics Letters | 2011

Microfabricated surface ion trap on a high-finesse optical mirror

Peter F. Herskind; Shannon X. Wang; Molu Shi; Yufei Ge; Marko Cetina; Isaac L. Chuang

A novel approach to optics integration in ion traps is demonstrated based on a surface electrode ion trap that is microfabricated on top of a dielectric mirror. Additional optical losses due to fabrication are found to be as low as 80 ppm for light at 422 nm. The integrated mirror is used to demonstrate light collection from, and imaging of, a single Sr88(+) ion trapped 169±4 μm above the mirror.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2011

Laser-induced charging of microfabricated ion traps

Shannon X. Wang; Guang Hao Low; Nathan S. Lachenmyer; Yufei Ge; Peter F. Herskind; Isaac L. Chuang

Electrical charging of metal surfaces due to photoelectric generation of carriers is of concern in trapped ion quantum computation systems, due to the high sensitivity of the ions’ motional quantum states to deformation of the trapping potential. The charging induced by typical laser frequencies involved in Doppler cooling and quantum control is studied here, with microfabricated surface-electrode traps made of aluminum, copper, and gold, operated at 6 K with a single Sr+ ion trapped 100 μm above the trap surface. The lasers used are at 370, 405, 460, and 674 nm, and the typical photon flux at the trap is 1014 photons/cm2/sec. Charging is detected by monitoring the ion’s micromotion signal, which is related to the number of charges created on the trap. A wavelength and material dependence of the charging behavior is observed: Lasers at lower wavelengths cause more charging, and aluminum exhibits more charging than copper or gold. We describe the charging dynamic based on a rate-equation approach.


Physical Review A | 2010

Demonstration of a quantum logic gate in a cryogenic surface-electrode ion trap

Shannon X. Wang; Jaroslaw Labaziewicz; Yufei Ge; Ruth Shewmon; Isaac L. Chuang

We demonstrate quantum control techniques for a single trapped ion in a cryogenic, surface-electrode trap. A narrow optical transition of Sr{sup +} along with the ground and first excited motional states of the harmonic trapping potential form a two-qubit system. The optical qubit transition is susceptible to magnetic field fluctuations, which we stabilize with a simple and compact method using superconducting rings. Decoherence of the motional qubit is suppressed by the cryogenic environment. ac Stark shift correction is accomplished by controlling the laser phase in the pulse sequencer, eliminating the need for an additional laser. Quantum process tomography is implemented on atomic and motional states by use of conditional pulse sequences. With these techniques, we demonstrate a Cirac-Zoller controlled-not gate in a single ion with a mean fidelity of 91(1)%.


conference on lasers and electro-optics | 2011

Microfabricated surface trap for scalable ion-photon interfaces

Peter F. Herskind; Shannon X. Wang; Molu Shi; Yufei Ge; Marko Cetina; Isaac L. Chuang

We demonstrate a surface electrode ion trap microfabricated on top of a dielectric mirror, with the ion 169 μm above the trap surface. This represents a scalable approach to trapped ion quantum computing with photonic interconnects.

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Isaac L. Chuang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jaroslaw Labaziewicz

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Shannon X. Wang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ruth Shewmon

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Marko Cetina

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Paul Antohi

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Peter F. Herskind

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Molu Shi

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Alexei Bylinskii

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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David R. Leibrandt

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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