Noise spectroscopy through dynamical decoupling with a superconducting flux qubit
Journal article, 2011

Quantum coherence in natural and artificial spin systems is fundamental to applications ranging from quantum information science to magnetic-resonance imaging and identification. Several multipulse control sequences targeting generalized noise models have been developed to extend coherence by dynamically decoupling a spin system from its noisy environment. In any particular implementation, however, the efficacy of these methods is sensitive to the specific frequency distribution of the noise, suggesting that these same pulse sequences could also be used to probe the noise spectrum directly. Here we demonstrate noise spectroscopy by means of dynamical decoupling using a superconducting qubit with energy-relaxation time T1 =12 μs. We first demonstrate that dynamical decoupling improves the coherence time T 2 in this system up to the T2 =2 T1 limit (pure dephasing times exceeding 100 μs), and then leverage its filtering properties to probe the environmental noise over a frequency (f) range 0.2-20 MHz, observing a 1/fα distribution with α < 1. The characterization of environmental noise has broad utility for spin-resonance applications, enabling the design of optimized coherent-control methods, promoting device and materials engineering, and generally improving coherence. © 2011 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

Author

Jonas Bylander

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Quantum Device Physics

S. Gustavsson

F. Yan

F. Yoshihara

K. Harrabi

G. Fitch

D.G. Cory

Y. Nakamura

J.S. Tsai

W.D. Oliver

Nature Physics

1745-2473 (ISSN) 17452481 (eISSN)

Vol. 7 7 565-570

Subject Categories

Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

Nano Technology

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1038/nphys1994

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Created

10/8/2017