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Heidelberg 2015 – scientific programme

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Q: Fachverband Quantenoptik und Photonik

Q 48: Optomechanics I

Q 48.7: Talk

Thursday, March 26, 2015, 12:30–12:45, P/H1

Entangling distant superconducting qubits using nanomechanical transducers — •Ondrej Cernotik, Denis Vasilyev, and Klemens Hammerer — Institute for Theoretical Physics, Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute), Leibniz University Hannover, Germany

Optical fields are ideal for transmission of quantum information due to low losses and high repetition rates. Microwave fields, on the other hand, can be used to manipulate superconducting systems that belong among the most promising candidates for quantum computing architecture. A device enabling conversion between electromagnetic fields of such distinct frequencies would thus represent a basic building block of future quantum computer networks. Nanomechanical oscillators represent an extremely suitable platform for this task as they can couple to both optical and microwave fields. The electromechanical interaction is achieved through capacitance of an LC circuit, where the change of voltage couples to the position of a mechanical membrane forming one plate of the capacitor, while coupling to the visible light is due to radiation pressure from light reflected off the membrane.

Here we study how such nanomechanical transducers can be employed to generate entanglement between two superconducting qubits placed on two separate chips. Our protocol is based on continuous Bell measurement of the outgoing light fields and applying feedback on the qubits. With such a setup, it is, in principle, possible to generate entanglement between qubits deterministically in the steady state.

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