Scalable hyperfine qubit state detection via electron shelving in the 2D5/2 and 2F7/2 manifolds in 171Yb+

Abstract

Qubits encoded in hyperfine states of trapped ions are ideal for quantum computation given their long lifetimes and low sensitivity to magnetic fields, yet they suffer from off-resonant scattering during detection often limiting their measurement fidelity. In 171Yb+ this is exacerbated by a low fluorescence yield, which leads to a need for complex and expensive hardware - a problematic bottleneck especially when scaling up the number of qubits. We demonstrate a detection routine based on electron shelving to address this issue in 171Yb+ and achieve a 5.6× reduction in single-ion detection error on an avalanche photodiode to 1.8(2)×10-3 in a 100 μs detection period, and a 4.3× error reduction on an electron multiplying CCD camera, with 7.7(2)×10-3 error in 400 μs. We further improve the characterization of a repump transition at 760 nm to enable a more rapid reset of the auxiliary 2F7/2 states populated after shelving. Finally, we examine the detection fidelity limit using the long-lived 2F7/2 state, achieving a further 300× and 12× reduction in error to 6(7)×10-6 and 6.3(3)×10-4 in 1 ms on the respective detectors. While shelving-rate limited in our setup, we suggest various techniques to realize this detection method at speeds compatible with quantum information processing, providing a pathway to ultra-high fidelity detection in 171Yb+.

0

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…