Bulletin of the American Physical Society
53rd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Volume 67, Number 7
Monday–Friday, May 30–June 3 2022; Orlando, Florida
Session X06: Sensors, Quantum Characterization, and Processing
8:00 AM–10:00 AM,
Friday, June 3, 2022
Room: Salon 1/2
Chair: Chandra Raman, Georgia Tech
Abstract: X06.00010 : Towards an all-electronic microwave-enabled trapped electron quantum computer
9:48 AM–10:00 AM
Presenter:
Qian Yu
(University of California, Berkeley)
Authors:
Qian Yu
(University of California, Berkeley)
Clemens Matthiesen
(University of California, Berkeley)
Timothy Guo
(University of California, Berkeley)
Alberto M Alonso
(University of California, Berkeley)
Kristin M Beck
(Lawrence Livermore National Lab)
Robert T Sutherland
(University of Texas at San Antonio)
Dietrich Leibfried
(National Institute of Standards and Tech)
Jackie Caminiti
(University of California, Berkeley)
Kayla J Rodriguez
(University of California, Riverside)
Madhav Dhital
(University of California, Riverside)
Boerge Hemmerling
(University of California, Riverside)
Hartmut Haeffner
(University of California, Berkeley)
Towards this goal, we trap single to few electrons in a millimeter-sized quadrupole Paul trap driven at 1.6 GHz in a room-temperature ultra-high vacuum setup. Electrons with sub-5 meV energies are introduced into the trap by near-resonant photoionisation of an atomic calcium beam and confined by microwave and static electric fields for several tens of milliseconds. A fraction of these electrons remains trapped longer and show no measurable loss for measurement times up to a second. Electronic excitation of the motion reveals secular frequencies which can be tuned over a range of several tens to hundreds of MHz.
Operating an electron Paul trap in a cryogenic environment may provide a platform for all-electric quantum computing with trapped electron spin qubits. Our recent feasibility study and simulation of common two-qubit error sources shows that error rates of less than 1E-4 at clock speeds of 1 MHz for transport and quantum gates should be feasible.
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