Qubit quantum-dot sensors: noise cancellation by coherent backaction, initial slips, and elliptical precession
M. Hell, M. R. Wegewijs, D. P. DiVincenzo

TL;DR
This paper provides a detailed theoretical analysis of a quantum-dot sensor's backaction on a qubit, revealing that quantum fluctuations mitigate noise effects and that the sensor's dynamical variables significantly influence qubit dynamics, including initial slips and elliptical precession.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive non-Markovian kinetic model for sensor-qubit dynamics, highlighting the importance of quantum fluctuations and initial slips often neglected in simpler models.
Findings
Quantum fluctuations mitigate measurement backaction.
Initial slips in qubit state persist over many cycles.
Qubit Bloch vector exhibits elliptical precession.
Abstract
We theoretically investigate the backaction of a sensor quantum dot with strong local Coulomb repulsion on the transient dynamics of a qubit that is probed capacitively. We show that the measurement backaction induced by the noise of electron cotunneling through the sensor is surprisingly mitigated by the recently identified coherent backaction [PRB 89, 195405] arising from quantum fluctuations. This renormalization effect is missing in semiclassical stochastic fluctuator models and typically also in Born-Markov approaches, which try to avoid the calculation of the nonstationary, nonequilibrium state of the qubit plus sensor. Technically, we integrate out the current-carrying electrodes to obtain kinetic equations for the joint, nonequilibrium detector-qubit dynamics. We show that the sensor-current response, level renormalization, cotunneling, and leading non-Markovian corrections…
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