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91̽»¨
Atomic and Laser Physics
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Dougal Main

Visitor

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • Ion trap quantum computing
dougal.main@physics.ox.ac.uk
Clarendon Laboratory, room 145.00.21 (Ion Trap Laboratory
  • About
  • Publications

Robust quantum memory in a trapped-ion quantum network node

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society 130 (2023) 090803

Authors:

Peter Drmota, Dougal Main, David P Nadlinger, Bethan Nichol, Marius A Weber, Ellis M Ainley, Ayush Agrawal, Raghavendra Srinivas, Gabriel Araneda, Chris J Ballance, David Lucas

Abstract:

We integrate a long-lived memory qubit into a mixed-species trapped-ion quantum network node. Ion-photon entanglement first generated with a network qubit in 88Sr+ is transferred to 43Ca+ with 0.977(7) fidelity, and mapped to a robust memory qubit. We then entangle the network qubit with another photon, which does not affect the memory qubit. We perform quantum state tomography to show that the fidelity of ion-photon entanglement decays ∼ 70 times slower on the memory qubit. Dynamical decoupling further extends the storage time; we measure an ion-photon entanglement fidelity of 0.81(4) after 10 s.

A quantum network of two entangled optical atomic clocks

SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics (2023) 1

Authors:

Raghavendra Srinivas, Bethan C Nichol, David P Nadlinger, Peter Drmota, Dougal Main, Gabriel Araneda, Christopher J Ballance, David M Lucas

Entanglement-enhanced frequency comparison of two optical atomic clocks

European Quantum Electronics Conference, EQEC 2023 in Proceedings Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics/Europe, CLEO/Europe 2023 and European Quantum Electronics Conference EQEC 2023, Part of Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics/Europe, CLEO/Europe 2 (2023)

Authors:

BC Nichol, R Srinivas, DP Nadlinger, P Drmota, D Main, G Araneda, CJ Ballance, DM Lucas

Robust quantum memory in a trapped-ion quantum network node

(2022)

Authors:

Peter Drmota, D Main, David P Nadlinger, Bethan C Nichol, MA Weber, Ellis M Ainley, Ayush Agrawal, Raghavendra Srinivas, Gabriel Araneda Machuca, Christopher J Ballance, David M Lucas

An elementary quantum network of entangled optical atomic clocks

Nature Springer Nature 609:7928 (2022) 689-694

Authors:

Bc Nichol, R Srinivas, Dp Nadlinger, P Drmota, D Main, G Araneda, Cj Ballance, Dm Lucas

Abstract:

Optical atomic clocks are our most precise tools to measure time and frequency1,2,3. Precision frequency comparisons between clocks in separate locations enable one to probe the space–time variation of fundamental constants4,5 and the properties of dark matter6,7, to perform geodesy8,9,10 and to evaluate systematic clock shifts. Measurements on independent systems are limited by the standard quantum limit; measurements on entangled systems can surpass the standard quantum limit to reach the ultimate precision allowed by quantum theory—the Heisenberg limit. Although local entangling operations have demonstrated this enhancement at microscopic distances11,12,13,14,15,16, comparisons between remote atomic clocks require the rapid generation of high-fidelity entanglement between systems that have no intrinsic interactions. Here we report the use of a photonic link17,18 to entangle two 88Sr+ ions separated by a macroscopic distance19 (approximately 2 m) to demonstrate an elementary quantum network of entangled optical clocks. For frequency comparisons between the ions, we find that entanglement reduces the measurement uncertainty by nearly 2‾√, the value predicted for the Heisenberg limit. Today’s optical clocks are typically limited by dephasing of the probe laser20; in this regime, we find that entanglement yields a factor of 2 reduction in the measurement uncertainty compared with conventional correlation spectroscopy techniques20,21,22. We demonstrate this enhancement for the measurement of a frequency shift applied to one of the clocks. This two-node network could be extended to additional nodes23, to other species of trapped particles or—through local operations—to larger entangled systems.

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