Methods and apparatuses for identifying and controlling quantum emitters in a quantum system
US-11262785-B2 · Mar 1, 2022 · US
US12481306B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-12481306-B2 |
| Application number | US-202318309559-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Apr 28, 2023 |
| Priority date | Jan 5, 2018 |
| Publication date | Nov 25, 2025 |
| Grant date | Nov 25, 2025 |
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The disclosure describes an adaptive and optimal imaging of individual quantum emitters within a lattice or optical field of view for quantum computing. Advanced image processing techniques are described to identify individual optically active quantum bits (qubits) with an imager. Images of individual and optically-resolved quantum emitters fluorescing as a lattice are decomposed and recognized based on fluorescence. Expected spatial distributions of the quantum emitters guides the processing, which uses adaptive fitting of peak distribution functions to determine the number of quantum emitters in real time. These techniques can be used for the loading process, where atoms or ions enter the trap one-by-one, for the identification of solid-state emitters, and for internal state-detection of the quantum emitters, where each emitter can be fluorescent or dark depending on its internal state. This latter application is relevant to efficient and fast detection of optically active qubits in quantum simulations and quantum computing.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1 . A method for determining qubit values for a plurality of atomic ions in an ion trap, the method identification comprising: preparing, by an optical source, at least one atomic ion of the plurality of atomic ions in a bright state while maintaining all other atomic ions of the plurality of atomic ions in a different state than the bright state; collecting a fluorescing image of the at least one atomic ion of the plurality of atomic ions in the bright state; determining a respective centroid and a respective width of the at least one atomic ion based on an individual atomic ion intensity detected in the fluorescing image; and determining a qubit value of the at least one atomic ion based on the determined centroid and width of the at least one atomic ion. 2 . The method according to claim 1 , further comprising: performing a maximum likelihood method to decompose a distribution of a peak intensity in the fluorescing image into a best fit linear combination of all of a plurality of individual basis intensity distributions; and determining the qubit value of the at least one atomic ion based on the best fit linear combination. 3 . The method according to claim 2 , wherein the distribution of the peak intensity in the fluorescing image is based on the determined centroid and width of the at least one atomic ion. 4 . The method according to claim 1 , further comprising establishing individual basis intensity distributions for each of the plurality of atomic ions. 5 . The method according to claim 1 , wherein the bright state is a bright quantum state and the different state is a dark state or a dark quantum state. 6 . The method of claim 1 , wherein the optical source is a red-detuned near-resonant laser that Doppler cools the plurality of atomic ions and fluoresces the at least one atomic ion. 7 . The method of claim 2 , wherein determining the qubit value comprises adaptively correcting the plurality of atomic ions in response to the best fit linear combination indicating that there is a slow movement of at least a subset of the plurality of atomic ions, there are dropouts from losing trapped atomic ions, or drifts affecting crosstalk. 8 . The method of claim 2 , wherein determining the peak intensity in the fluorescing image comprises identifying a region-of-interest (ROI) for the at least one atomic ion based on one or more of the centroid and the width of the respective individual peak intensity. 9 . The method of claim 8 , further comprising labeling the ROI with one or more of a text identifier or a geometric shape encircling the respective individual peak intensity. 10 . The method of claim 9 , further comprising indicating, by the text identifier, a number assigned to the at least one atomic ion. 11 . The method of claim 1 , further comprising periodically identifying the qubit value for the at least one atomic ion as part of a calibration procedure. 12 . A quantum information processing (QIP) system, comprising: an ion trap configured to trap a plurality of atomic ions; an optical controller configured to control an optical source to configure at least one atomic ion of the plurality of atomic ions in a bright state while maintaining all other atomic ions of the plurality of atomic ions in a different state than the bright state; and an imaging system configured to: collect a fluorescing image of the at least one atomic ion of the plurality of atomic ions in the bright state, determine a respective centroid and a respective width of the at least one atomic ion based on an individual atomic ion intensity detected in the fluorescing image, and determine a qubit value of the at least one atomic ion based on the determined centroid and width of the at least one atomic ion. 13 . The QIP system according to claim 12 , wherein the imaging system configured to: perform a maximum likelihood method to decompose a distribution of a peak intensity in the fluorescing image into a best fit linear combination of all of a plurality of individual basis intensity distributions, and determine the qubit value of the at least one atomic ion based on the best fit linear combination. 14 . The QIP system according to claim 13 , wherein the distribution of the peak intensity in the fluorescing image is based on the determined centroid and width of the at least one atomic ion. 15 . The QIP system according to claim 12 , wherein the imaging system includes a CCD camera or a CMOS camera that is configured to collect the fluorescing image. 16 . The QIP system according to claim 12 , wherein the bright state is a bright quantum state and the different state is a dark state or a dark quantum state. 17 . The QIP system according to claim 12 , wherein the optical source is a red-detuned near-resonant laser that Doppler cools the plurality of atomic ions and fluoresces the at least one atomic ion. 18 . The QIP system according to claim 13 , wherein the imaging system is further configured to determine the qubit value by adaptively correcting the plurality of atomic ions in response to the best fit linear combination indicating that there is a slow movement of at least a subset of the plurality of atomic ions, there are dropouts from losing trapped atomic ions, or drifts affecting crosstalk. 19 . The QIP system according to claim 13 , wherein the imaging system is further configured to determine the peak intensity in the fluorescing image by identifying a region-of-interest (ROI) for the at least one atomic ion based on one or more of the centroid and the width of the respective individual peak intensity. 20 . The QIP system according to claim 19 , wherein the imaging system is further configured to label the ROI with one or more of a text identifier or a geometric shape encircling the respective individual peak intensity.
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Physical realisations or architectures of quantum processors or components for manipulating qubits, e.g. qubit coupling or qubit control · CPC title
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Fluorescence microscopy (fluorescence microscopes per se G02B21/0076 and G02B21/16) · CPC title
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