Feasibility study on ground-state cooling and single-phonon readout of
trapped electrons using hybrid quantum systems
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2204.07957v2
- Date: Tue, 16 Aug 2022 14:33:31 GMT
- Title: Feasibility study on ground-state cooling and single-phonon readout of
trapped electrons using hybrid quantum systems
- Authors: Alto Osada, Kento Taniguchi, Masato Shigefuji and Atsushi Noguchi
- Abstract summary: Controlling the motional state of the trapped electron is a crucial issue.
We show that the ground-state cooling and the single-phonon readout of the motional state of the trapped electron are possible.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Qubits of long coherence time and fast quantum operations are long-sought
objectives towards the realization of high-fidelity quantum operations and
their applications to the quantum technologies. An electron levitated in a
vacuum by a Paul trap is expected to be a good candidate, for its light mass
and hence the high secular frequency which allows for the faster gate
operations than those in trapped ions. Controlling the motional state of the
trapped electron is a crucial issue, for it mediates an interaction between
electron spins, intrinsic qubits embedded in electrons, and its decoherence
results in degraded fidelity of two-qubit gates. In addition, an efficient
readout of the motional state is important, regarding the possibility of
detecting spin state by using it. Despite of such an importance, how to achieve
the motional ground state and how to efficiently detect it are not reported so
far. Here we propose methods addressing these issues by utilizing hybrid
quantum systems involving electron-superconducting circuit and electron-ion
coupled systems and analyze the feasibility of our schemes. In both systems, we
show that the ground-state cooling and the single-phonon readout of the
motional state of the trapped electron are possible. Our work shed light on the
way to precisely control the motional states of the trapped electrons, that
provides an interesting playground for the development of quantum technologies.
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