Algorithmic Ground-State Cooling of Weakly Coupled Oscillators Using Quantum Logic

authored by
Steven A. King, Lukas J. Spieß, Peter Micke, Alexander Wilzewski, Tobias Leopold, José R. Crespo López-Urrutia, Piet O. Schmidt
Abstract

The majority of ions and other charged particles of spectroscopic interest lack the fast, cycling transitions that are necessary for direct laser cooling. In most cases, they can still be cooled sympathetically through their Coulomb interaction with a second, coolable ion species confined in the same potential. If the charge-to-mass ratios of the two ion types are too mismatched, the cooling of certain motional degrees of freedom becomes difficult. This limits both the achievable fidelity of quantum gates and the spectroscopic accuracy. Here, we introduce a novel algorithmic cooling protocol for transferring phonons from poorly to efficiently cooled modes. We demonstrate it experimentally by simultaneously bringing two motional modes of a Be+−Ar13+ mixed Coulomb crystal close to their zero-point energies, despite the weak coupling between the ions. We reach the lowest temperature reported for a highly charged ion, with a residual temperature of only T≲200  μK in each of the two modes, corresponding to a residual mean motional phonon number of ⟨n⟩≲0.4. Combined with the lowest observed electric-field noise in a radio-frequency ion trap, these values enable an optical clock based on a highly charged ion with fractional systematic uncertainty below the 10−18 level. Our scheme is also applicable to (anti)protons, molecular ions, macroscopic charged particles, and other highly charged ion species, enabling reliable preparation of their motional quantum ground states in traps.

Organisation(s)
Institute of Quantum Optics
QuantumFrontiers
CRC 1227 Designed Quantum States of Matter (DQ-mat)
External Organisation(s)
National Metrology Institute of Germany (PTB)
Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics
Type
Article
Journal
Physical Review X
Volume
11
ISSN
2160-3308
Publication date
10.12.2021
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Physics and Astronomy(all)
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2102.12427 (Access: Open)
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.11.041049 (Access: Open)