Controlled exchange interaction between pairs of neutral atoms in an optical lattice
M. Anderlini, P. J. Lee, B. L. Brown, J. Sebby-Strabley, W. D., Phillips, J. V. Porto

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates controlled entanglement between pairs of neutral atoms in an optical lattice using exchange interactions, achieving a key step towards quantum gates with neutral atoms.
Contribution
First experimental realization of controlled exchange coupling for entangling neutral atom pairs in an optical lattice.
Findings
Achieved controlled exchange interactions in atom pairs
Demonstrated spin interchange with coherence time over 10 ms
Realized the first step towards a neutral atom quantum SWAP gate
Abstract
Ultra-cold atoms trapped by light, with their robust quantum coherence and controllability, provide an attractive system for quantum information processing and for simulation of complex problems in condensed matter physics. Many quantum information processing schemes require that individual qubits be manipulated and deterministically entangled with one another, a process that would typically be accomplished by controlled, state-dependent, coherent interactions among qubits. Recent experiments have made progress toward this goal by demonstrating entanglement among an ensemble of atoms confined in an optical lattice. Until now, however, there has been no demonstration of a key operation: controlled entanglement between atoms in isolated pairs. We have used an optical lattice of double-well potentials to isolate and manipulate arrays of paired atoms, inducing controlled entangling…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
