Quantum Tomography of Suspended Carbon Nanotubes
Abstract
We propose and analyze an all-mechanical route to coherent control and quantum-state reconstruction of the fundamental flexural mode of a suspended carbon nanotube (CNT) operated in the anharmonic (Duffing/Kerr). A nearby atomic force microscope (AFM) provides a single, localized actuator that applies calibrated, time-dependent forces to the CNT. In the presence of mechanical anharmonicity this enables spectrally selective control of the lowest vibrational transition and thus supports effective two-level protocols such as Rabi oscillations and Ramsey interferometry. The same actuator also implements phase-space displacements required for Wigner function tomography via displaced-parity sampling, thereby unifying control and tomography without optical heating and without dedicated on-chip microwave drive lines at the CNT resonator. We develop explicit pulse sequences and a master equation framework that connect experimentally accessible signals to energy relaxation and phase coherence times and to parity-based quantum signatures, including negative regions of the Wigner function. The approach is compatible with multiple readout modalities, including direct AFM-based detection and dispersive coupling to superconducting circuitry such as Cooper-pair box, and/or a microwave cavity. Together, these techniques provide complete access to populations, coherence, and parity within a single device architecture. This minimal scheme provides a practical route to all-mechanical quantum control and state-resolved characterization of decoherence in mesoscopic mechanical systems.
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