Coherent electron displacement for quantum information processing using attosecond single cycle pulses
Hicham Agueny

TL;DR
This paper proposes a theoretical method for ultrafast quantum information processing by using attosecond single-cycle pulses to coherently displace electrons, enabling rapid control of quantum states and superpositions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach utilizing attosecond pulses for electron displacement, surpassing previous speed limitations in quantum control.
Findings
Demonstrates unidirectional electron displacement with attosecond pulses
Shows long-distance phase information retrieval from displaced wavepackets
Enables attosecond control of electron motion in ion chains
Abstract
Coherent electron displacement is a conventional strategy for processing quantum information, as it enables to interconnect distinct sites in a network of atoms. The efficiency of the processing relies on the precise control of the mechanism, which has yet to be established. Here, we theoretically demonstrate a new route to drive the electron displacement on a timescale faster than that of the dynamical distortion of the electron wavepacket by utilizing attosecond single-cycle pulses. The characteristic feature of these pulses relies on a vast momentum transfer to an electron, leading to its displacement following a unidirectional path. The scenario is illustrated by revealing the spatiotemporal nature of the displaced wavepacket encoding a quantum superposition state. We map out the associated phase information and retrieve it over long distances from the origin. Moreover, we show that…
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