Coupling the motional quantum states of spatially distant ions using a conducting wire
N. Van Horne, M. Mukherjee

TL;DR
This theoretical study proposes using a conducting wire to couple motional quantum states of ions in separate traps, offering an alternative to laser-based coupling, with analysis of decoherence, noise, and design constraints indicating feasibility with current technology.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel wire-based coupling method for distant ion qubits, including an analytical model accounting for surface noise and a corrected capacitance coefficient, demonstrating practical feasibility.
Findings
Coupling time is less than one-tenth of decoherence time.
Surface noise constrains parameter ranges but does not prevent quantum information exchange.
Design parameters can be optimized using classical signal-to-noise ratio criteria.
Abstract
Interfacing ion qubits in separate traps is among the challenges towards scaling up ion quantum computing. This theoretical study focuses on using a conducting wire to couple the motional quantum states of ions in separate planar traps. This approach of interfacing ion traps provides an alternative to coupling distant qubits with lasers. We include the effects of (Anomalous) surface heating noise, using aggregate and recent experimental findings as the basis for an analytical model of the motional state decoherence time . Our optimized design for the coupling system can be used to exchange quantum information with a time less than one tenth of the information decay time . We derive a coefficient which relates the capacitances of each part of the coupling system and corrects an oversight common to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
