Bulletin of the American Physical Society
56th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Monday–Friday, June 16–20, 2025; Portland, Oregon
Session D00: Poster Session I + GPMFC Student Poster Competition (4:00PM - 6:00PM PT)
4:00 PM,
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
Oregon Convention Center:
Room: Exhibit Hall E
Abstract: D00.00050 : Towards a Scalable and More Efficient Ytterbium Atom Array Quantum Device*
Presenter:
Timothy Chang
(Stanford University)
Authors:
Timothy Chang
(Stanford University)
Nick N Gharabaghi
(Stanford University)
Areeq Hasan
(Stanford University)
Laura Zhou
(Stanford University)
Tsz-Him Leung
(Stanford University)
Joonhee Choi
(Stanford University)
To enable rapid atom loading in tweezers and improve experimental repetition rates, we implement a dual-wavelength magneto-optical trap in a core-shell configuration. Additionally, we utilize fast light modulators to engineer the geometry and transport of optical tweezers, introducing new modalities for running quantum operations with improved scalability and efficiency. We encode quantum information into nuclear spin states within the metastable clock manifold at a magic trapping wavelength, which facilitates high-fidelity imaging and cooling, rapid (MHz-scale) single-qubit rotations via Raman transitions, motional decoherence-free rearrangement, and erasure detection for high-fidelity quantum operations.
Using over 1,000 qubits based on this long-lived nuclear spin state, we aim to explore and benchmark quantum many-body dynamics in a regime where classical computers struggle. This will be achieved through both digital circuit and analog Hamiltonian dynamics approaches, with optimally co-designed quantum circuits and Floquet engineering involving trappable Rydberg states. These efforts open up new opportunities to address key questions in modern condensed matter physics, particularly those concerning magnetism and topological phases of matter.
*Supported by AFOSR Grant (FA9550-23-1-0625) and the Terman Faculty Fellowship at Stanford University
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