Feng-Yang Zhang1,2, Xin-Yu Chen2, Chong Li2, He-Shan Song2. 1. School of Physics and Materials Engineering, Dalian Nationalities University, Dalian 116600, China. 2. School of Physics and Optoelectronic Technology, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian 116024, China.
Abstract
In this paper, we demonstrate how information can be transferred among the long-distance memory units in a hybrid solid architecture, which consists the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) ensemble acting as the memory unit, the LC circuit acting as the transmitter (receiver), and the flux qubit acting as the interface. Numerical simulation demonstrates that the high-fidelity quantum information transfer between memory unit and transmitter (receiver) can be implemented, and this process is robust to both the LC circuit decay and NV ensemble spontaneous emission.
In this paper, we demonstrate how information can be transferred among the long-distance memory units in a hybrid solid architecture, which consists the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) ensemble acting as the memory unit, the LC circuit acting as the transmitter (receiver), and the flux qubit acting as the interface. Numerical simulation demonstrates that the high-fidelity quantum information transfer between memory unit and transmitter (receiver) can be implemented, and this process is robust to both the LC circuit decay and NV ensemble spontaneous emission.
Quantum information transfer (QIT) and long-distance quantum communication (LDQC) play an
important role in the field of the quantum information1. They can
transmit quantum information bewteen distant sites. How to realize QIT and LDQC is still
an open question. Generally speaking, a good physical system should satisfy two
conditions for the QIT and LDQC. First, the system has sufficiently long coherence time,
i.e., QIT and LDQC should be achieved before the decoherence happens. Second, the system
has a robust channel to avoid the loss of information. As far as we know, there are many
proposals for the QIT and LDQC. For example, (i) several optical cavities (microsphere
cavities) were linked by fibers (superconducting qubits), and atoms (atomic ensembles,
quantum dots, ions, or ionic ensembles) acting as qubits were trapped in each cavity,
the deterministic QIT and LDQC were realized with separated qubits2345678. (ii) QIT and LDQC were implemented with separated
qubits via the virtual excitation of the data bus to induce the coupling9101112. (iii) Using linear optics devices, the QIT and LDQC were
achieved by one photon of an entangled pair in free-space13, and so on.
Due to optical absorption and channel’s noise, the successful probabilities
of the QIT and LDQC will reduce with the increase of the distance. In this paper, we
propose a different scheme, which is a good candidate for realizing QIT and LDQC.On the other hand, among various kinds of solids, the nitrogen vacancy (NV) in diamond
has a long coherence time at room temperature14 and large capacity of
information storage15. It is a promising candidate for the storage of the
quantum information. In this physical system, the recent experiments have implemented
two-qubit conditional quantum gate16 and Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm17. Another solid system, the superconducting qubits have advantages in
design flexibility, large-scale integration, and compatibility to conventional
electronics1819. And they have shown the superiority in quantum
simulation20 and generating of the quantum entanglement21, etc. Thus, the hybrid solid system devices have attracted
tremendous attentions, which consist of respect advantages of various physical systems
(see22 and references therein). Recently, ref. 23 has proposed the magnetic coupling between a superconducting flux
qubit and a single NV center can be about 3 orders of magnitude stronger than that
associated with stripline resonators. Then, the coherent coupling and information
transferred between a flux qubit and a NV ensemble have been implemented2425, respectively. In addition, the coupling between single NV center
and a superconducting cavity by a flux qubit has been suggested26, the
strong coupling between a NV ensemble and a transmission-line resonator by a flux qubit
was presented27, and the short-distance QIT between NV ensembles was
proposed28.Motivated by the recent papers232425262728, here, we elaborate a
different proposal to realize QIT and LDQC with simple physical set-ups. As shown in
Fig. 1, Alice and Bob have a same device,
respectively, which consists a NV ensemble, a flux qubit, and a LC circuit. The
NV ensemble acts as the information memory unit, the flux qubit acts as the interface,
and the LC circuit is a transmitter (receiver) of information. In the large
detuning regime, the degrees of freedom of the flux qubit can be eliminated, and we
obtain the effective coupling between the NV ensemble and the LC circuit. And the
entanglement of the two subsystems is induced by a flux qubit. Initially, the
information is stored in the memory unit of Alice. Then, the information is
transferred to transmitter by means of evolution of the system. Through the antenna
radiation of the LC circuit, the information is transferred in free-space. At
distant sites, the information is received by the receiver of Bob, then stored in
the memory unit. So, the LDQC between two spatially-distant memory units has been
achieved.
Figure 1
The long-distance quantum communication is realized from Alice to Bob by
antenna radiation.
Alice and Bob have the same device, respectively, which consists of a NV
ensemble, a flux qubit, and a LC circuit. The flux qubit consists of
four Josephson junctions with the Josephson energies
E and αE
(0.5 < α < 1).
Φ and
Φ are the magnetic flux
through two loops, respectively. L and C are the inductance
and capacitor of the LC circuit, respectively.
Results
System and Model
The model as shown in Fig. 1. The flux qubit can be
described as a two-level system2930, the Hamiltonian is
(setting ħ = 1) where
ε(Φ) = 2I(Φ − 0.5Φ0)
is the energy spacing of the two classical current states,
I is persistent current of the flux qubit,
Φ0 = h/2e is
the magnetic-flux quantum,
Φ = Φ/2 + Φ
is the external magnetic flux applied in the qubit; Δ is the energy
gap between the two states at the degeneracy point; Pauli matrices and are defined in terms
of the classical current where
|↻⟩ and
|↺⟩ denote the states with clockwise and
counterclockwise currents in the loop. After transformation to the eigenbasis of
the flux qubit, the Hamiltonian can be rewritten as , with the energy level separation of
the flux qubit.A NV has an electron spin S = 1, with zero-field
splitting D = 2.88 GHz between the
levels m = 0 and
m = ±131. By applying a static magnetic field along to the crystalline
axis of diamond, the degeneracy of levels can be
removed. The information is encoded in sublevels
and serving as qubit. For the NV ensemble, the
ground state is defined as and the excited state
is with operator 32. Under the large N and low excitations
conditions, the operators S− and
S+ satisfy the bosonic commutation relation, i.e.,
[S−,
S+] ≈ 133. Thus, the Hamiltonian of NV ensemble is written as , where
Ω = D − gμB
is the energy gap between the ground state sublevels and with the magnetic field
B, and g and
μ are the Lande factor and the Bohr
magneton, respectively.The NV ensemble couples to the flux qubit via the magnetic field created. The
Hamiltonian for flux qubit coupled to a NV ensemble can be represented by
J(S+ + S−)σ
with the coupling strength , here
J is the coupling strength between the flux
qubit and NV centers. After a trivial change of basis on the flux qubit and we
make a rotating wave approximation, the direct interaction Hamiltonian of the
flux qubit and the NV ensemble is
J(S+σ− + S−σ+)23.The LC circuit is described by a simple harmonic oscillator Hamiltonian
ωa†a with resonance
frequency , where
a† and a are the plasmon creation
and annihilation operators, respectively. In addition, since the interaction
between a flux qubit and an LC circuit via the mutual inductance M
has been experimentally realized34, the physical features have
been widely studied both in theory35 and in experiments3637. The interaction Hamiltonian is
g′(a† + a)σ
with coupling strength 34. At the
eigenbasis of the flux qubit, neglecting the small diagonal terms, the
interaction Hamiltonian can be written
g(aσ+ + a†σ−)
with effective coupling constant under the
rotating-wave approximation and the condition that
Δ > ε is
satisfied.According to the above mentions, in the Schrödinger picture, the
total Hamiltonian of a single device can be written asFor convenience, the Hamiltonian of the Eq. (1) can be
divided into two parts: the free term and the
interaction term
H = g(aσ+ + a†σ−) + J(S+σ− + S−σ+).
If the conditions and are satisfied (i.e., in the large detuning regime), the effective
Hamiltonian of the Eq. (1) is obtained by
Fröhlich-Nakajima transformation3839. The
expression of the effective Hamiltonian iswhere is an anti-Hermitian operator, which
satisfies the relation
H + [H0,
V] = 0. The Eq. (2)
discards the higher-order terms and only keeps the second-order term.If the flux qubit is prepared in the ground state
at the initial moment, we can realize the inductive coupling between the
LC circuit and the NV ensemble by virtual excitation of the flux
qubit. So, with the degrees of freedom of the flux qubit are eliminated, the
effective Hamiltonian of the hybrid system can be written aswhere the parameters and , the last term represents the interaction between the LC
circuit and the NV ensemble with the effective coupling strength .
Quantum information transfer
For n Fock states in the LC circuit, the NV ensemble and LC
circuit dynamics are completely confined to subspace with basis . The Hamiltonian (3) can be solved accurately, the
eigenstates can be expressed aswith the parameter , and corresponding to
eigenenergies are . Obviously, the Eq. (4) and (5) represent the entangled
states between the LC circuit and the NV ensemble. If the information is
stored in NV ensemble, we can read out it by measuring quantum states of the
LC circuit.In the interaction picture, the Hamiltonian (3) becomeswith the resonant interaction
Ω′ = ω′.
If the information is encoded in the NV ensemble at the initial moment, we can
realize the information transfer from NV ensemble (memory unit) to LC
circuit (transmitter), that is, with the
evolution time
t = (2k + 1)π/2λ,
(k = 0, 1, 2…), where
α and β are the normalized complex
numbers. Then, the information of the LC circuit can be emitted by the
antennary radiation. At the distant receiving terminal, the information is
received by another LC circuit (receiver), then stored in NV ensemble
(memory unit), that is, . In other word, we
realize a LDQC between Alice and Bob without using data bus
(fibers, transmission line resonator, or nanomechanical resonator). Moreover,
Alice can act as a base station, and Bob can act as a user. We
can realize the quantum communication from one base station to many users. The
channel of our scheme is electromagnetic wave, which has been widely used in the
field of communications. We now discuss the dominant noise of the channel due to
microwave photons loss. When the electromagnetic wave transmits in free-space,
the signal power of the receiver can be written aswhere P is the transmitted power,
G indicates the gain of antenna-transmitter,
G expresses the gain of antenna-receiver, d
is the distance between the transmitter and the receiver, and
λ′ is the wavelength. In order to avoid the
loss of the channel, we should shorten the distance d between the
transmitter and the receiver, or increase the wavelength
λ′.
Discussion
For a really physical system, we should take account of decoherence effects. As
Alice and Bob have the same dissipation mechanism, here, we only
discuss the decoherence effects of Alice. The flux qubit worked in large
detuning regime and prepared in the ground state. The decoherence effective of the
flux qubit is omitted. Thus, we only consider the decay of LC circuit, the dephasing
and relaxation of NV ensemble. Following the standard quantum theory of the damping,
the Markovian master equation iswhere the Lindblad term presents the decay of the
LC circuit and the decoherence of the NV ensemble, and the detailed
expression is
with the decay rate κ of the
LC circuit, and the dephasing rate
γ and the relaxation rate
γ of the NV ensemble. Fidelity is a direct measure to
characterize how accurate the information transfer from NV ensemble to LC
circuit, and its expression is , where is a target state to be stored in the LC circuit.
In Fig. 2, we plot the fidelity F as a function of the
dimensionless time λt with the different decay rate
κ, the dephasing rate
γ and the relaxation rate
γ. This figure shows that the high-fidelity QIT could be
achieved in the weak decoherence case.
Figure 2
The fidelity of the quantum state transfer from NV ensemble (memory unit) to
LC circuit (transmitter) versus the dimensionless time
λt with .
The solid-blue and dot-red lines correspond
to
κ = γ = γ = 0.01λ
and
κ = γ = γ = 0.1λ,
respectively.
The experiment24 has reported that the coupling strength between flux
qubit and NV ensemble is J = 70 MHz, the
Lande factor is g = 2, the Bohr
magneton is
μ = 14 MHz/mT,
and the magnetic field is
B = 2.6 mT. Besides,
the strong coupling of a LC circuit and a flux qubit has been
implemented37. In this experiment37, the coupling
strength between the flux qubit and the LC circuit is
g = 119 MHz, the frequency of the
LC circuit is
ω = 2.723 GHz, and the decay
rate of the LC circuit is
κ = 0.45 MHz. Through
adjusting the frequency ω of the flux qubit,
the large-detuning between the flux qubit and the LC circuit (NV ensemble)
can be well satisfied. Also, the resonant condition
Ω′ = ω′
is satisfied at the proper frequency ω, see in
Fig. 3. According to the above value of parameters, we can
estimate the effective coupling strength between NV ensemble and LC circuit
λ ~ 10 MHz.
Thus, the strong coupling between NV ensemble and LC circuit is realized. So,
we can estimate the time
t ~ 0.16 μs,
which is shorter than the decoherence time of the NV ensemble approaching
1 s40 and the flux qubits coherence time
T2 ≃ 20 μs41.
Figure 3
The relation between the Ω′ and the
ω′ with the change of the
ω.
When the ω takes certain value (black
panes), the resonant condition
Ω′ = ω′
is achieved.
In summary, we have proposed a hybrid solid architecture, which can realize the
strong coupling between a NV ensemble and a LC circuit by a flux qubit. We
have also shown the high-fidelity quantum information transfer between the NV
ensemble and the LC circuit. In addition, the LDQC can be implemented using
this architecture by the antenna radiation. The proposed architecture opens a way
for quantum communication from one base station to many users.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Zhang, F.-Y. et al. Long-distance quantum
information transfer with strong coupling hybrid solid system. Sci. Rep.
5, 17025; doi: 10.1038/srep17025 (2015).
Authors: R H Koch; G A Keefe; F P Milliken; J R Rozen; C C Tsuei; J R Kirtley; D P DiVincenzo Journal: Phys Rev Lett Date: 2006-03-27 Impact factor: 9.161
Authors: H Wang; Matteo Mariantoni; Radoslaw C Bialczak; M Lenander; Erik Lucero; M Neeley; A D O'Connell; D Sank; M Weides; J Wenner; T Yamamoto; Y Yin; J Zhao; John M Martinis; A N Cleland Journal: Phys Rev Lett Date: 2011-02-07 Impact factor: 9.161