| Literature DB >> 23784079 |
Kaveh Khodjasteh1, Jarrah Sastrawan, David Hayes, Todd J Green, Michael J Biercuk, Lorenza Viola.
Abstract
Quantum memory is a central component for quantum information processing devices, and will be required to provide high-fidelity storage of arbitrary states, long storage times and small access latencies. Despite growing interest in applying physical-layer error-suppression strategies to boost fidelities, it has not previously been possible to meet such competing demands with a single approach. Here we use an experimentally validated theoretical framework to identify periodic repetition of a high-order dynamical decoupling sequence as a systematic strategy to meet these challenges. We provide analytic bounds-validated by numerical calculations-on the characteristics of the relevant control sequences and show that a 'stroboscopic saturation' of coherence, or coherence plateau, can be engineered, even in the presence of experimental imperfection. This permits high-fidelity storage for times that can be exceptionally long, meaning that our device-independent results should prove instrumental in producing practically useful quantum technologies.Year: 2013 PMID: 23784079 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms3045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919