Neutral atoms held in optical traps are promising candidates for qubits in a quantum computer, with the atoms’ hyperfine states serving as the computer’s ones and zeros. But creating the necessary entangled states is a challenge, because atoms don't normally interact strongly at long distances. Two research groups, one at the University of Wisconsin and one at the Université Paris-Sud, the Institute d'Optique, and CNRS, recently demonstrated a long-range interaction called Rydberg blockade: When two atoms are separated by several microns, exciting one into a Rydberg state (an energetic state with a large, delocalized wavefunction) prevents the other from being similarly excited. (See Physics Today, February 2009, page 15.) Now, both groups have used Rydberg blockade to entangle the atoms in two hyperfine states. The Paris researchers irradiated both ground-state atoms with a laser pulse to create an entanglement with one atom in a Rydberg state and the other in the ground state. A second pulse coaxed the Rydberg atom back to the ground state, but into a different hyperfine level. The Wisconsin researchers constructed a quantum logic gate called a controlled NOT, or CNOT: a sequence of laser pulses, involving excitations to a Rydberg state, that changes the state of one atom if and only if the other, the control, is in a particular hyperfine state. Applying the CNOT gate when the control atom is in a superposition of states entangles the two atoms. (T. Wilk et al., Phys. Rev. Lett., in press; L. Isenhower et al., Phys. Rev. Lett., in press.) —Johanna Miller
Hyperfine entanglement from Rydberg blockade
Categories:
No TrackBacks
TrackBack URL: http://blogs.physicstoday.org/mt/mt-tb.cgi/4360
Search
Categories
- Acoustics (12)
- Astronomy and cosmology (40)
- Atomic physics (23)
- Biography and personalities
- Biological physics (43)
- Careers and employment
- Chemical physics and molecular physics (37)
- Classical mechanics and electromagnetism (5)
- Computational physics (15)
- Condensed matter (47)
- Crystallography (8)
- Earth sciences (37)
- Education (1)
- Energy policy and R&D (6)
- Engineering and technology (34)
- Facilities and laboratories (1)
- Fluids & rheology (29)
- Government agencies (2)
- History, sociology, and philosophy (1)
- Instrumentation (12)
- Materials science (31)
- Medical physics (4)
- Metrology and fundamental constants (4)
- Microscopy (13)
- Nanoscale science and technology (25)
- Nonlinear science and emergent phenomena (17)
- Nuclear and particle physics (17)
- Optics and photonics (36)
- Plasma physics (7)
- Quantum physics and information (23)
- Science policy and politics (4)
- Scientific societies and awards
- Statistical physics and thermodynamics (14)
- Theoretical physics (16)
Monthly Archives
- June 2011 (5)
- May 2011 (8)
- April 2011 (8)
- March 2011 (9)
- February 2011 (7)
- January 2011 (8)
- December 2010 (9)
- November 2010 (8)
- October 2010 (9)
- September 2010 (8)
- August 2010 (9)
- July 2010 (8)
- June 2010 (8)
- May 2010 (8)
- April 2010 (9)
- March 2010 (9)
- February 2010 (7)
- January 2010 (7)
- December 2009 (8)
- November 2009 (8)
- October 2009 (10)
- September 2009 (8)
- August 2009 (9)
- July 2009 (9)
- June 2009 (9)
- May 2009 (7)
- April 2009 (9)
- March 2009 (9)
- February 2009 (7)
- January 2009 (7)
- December 2008 (8)
- November 2008 (7)
- October 2008 (9)
- September 2008 (9)
- August 2008 (8)
- July 2008 (11)
- June 2008 (2)