Emergence of highly coherent quantum subsystems of a noisy and dense spin system
A.Beckert, M.Grimm, N.Wili, R.Tschaggelar, G.Jeschke, G.Matmon,, S.Gerber, M.M\"uller, G.Aeppli

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that in dense, noisy spin systems, interactions can be harnessed to significantly extend decoherence times of quantum subsystems, opening new avenues for quantum sensor and qubit development.
Contribution
It reveals how to leverage interactions in dense TLS networks to transition from hopping to fluctuation-dominated decoherence, greatly enhancing coherence times.
Findings
Decoherence times increased by nearly three orders of magnitude.
Identification of coherent localized pairs of Tb ions in a dense spin network.
Distinction between hopping and fluctuation regimes via Rabi oscillations and pulse sequences.
Abstract
Quantum sensors and qubits are usually two-level systems (TLS), the quantum analogs of classical bits which assume binary values '0' or '1'. They are useful to the extent to which they can persist in quantum superpositions of '0' and '1' in real environments. However, such TLS are never alone in real materials and devices, and couplings to other degrees of freedom limit the lifetimes - called decoherence times - of the superposition states. Decoherence occurs via two major routes - excitation hopping and fluctuating electromagnetic fields. Common mitigation strategies are based on material improvements, exploitation of clock states which couple only to second rather than first order to external perturbations, and reduction of interactions via extreme dilution of pure materials made from isotopes selected to minimize noise from nuclear spins. We demonstrate that for a dense TLS network…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Quantum optics and atomic interactions · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
